Online sliding puzzles for kids - Sei Whale

Posted by Olympiad tester on


Online sliding puzzles for kids - Sei Whale will enhance the problem solving and logical reasoning skills in your child while learning facts about this endangered species. These puzzles for kids are tough brain games that are designed to make the child think laterally. 

    INSTRUCTIONS TO PLAY THIS ONLINE SLIDING PUZZLE

    STEP1 - Click one of the tiles closest to the empty space to slide it into the empty space.

    Step1
    STEP 2 - Continue clicking the tiles to manipulate them into the empty spaces and form the picture at the right.
    Step2
    STEP 3Solving the puzzle fast and with few moves will give you a higher score.
    Step3


    TIPS TO SOLVE THIS ONLINE SLIDING PUZZLE

    • Most tile sliding puzzles are made up of three rows of three tiles each.Try to get one of the three rows lined up properly regarding tile order anywhere in the puzzle. For example, get the three tiles that go on the bottom row in order, even at the top of the puzzle.
    • Keep this row together as you Consider each piece carefully and try to figure out where it will go in the puzzle. This will help you as you manipulate them into the right place and as you line them up in rows of three.slide the tiles and it will be easier to solve the problem.
    • One of the hardest parts of solving a sliding puzzle is preventing future moves from ruining previous slides. There is nothing more frustating than having to move a new tile in a way that messes up all that you have done before. To prevent this, try to thing ahead and consider what will happen several moves in the future each time you slide a tile.

    The sei whale is one of the fastest whales, reaching speeds of up to 30 miles per hour. Sei whales inhabit all oceans and adjoining seas except in tropical and polar regions. Like other great whales, they prefer to spend the summer feeding in cooler waters before migrating to warmer waters to breed and give birth to their calves.

    Why are they endangered?

    While the sei whale has been hunted by humans since the 1860s, it wasn't until the 1950s and 1960s and the declining availability of blue and fin whales that the killings seriously expanded.

    Since 1986, the International Whaling Commission (IWC) has officially halted all commercial whaling. However, 50 sei whales are killed annually by Japanese whalers in the North Pacific under Japan's "scientific" whaling program.

    Whales are threatened by climate change and can also be harmed by pollution, shipping strikes and entanglement in fishing gear.



     


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