Last updated: May 3, 2020
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Junior Web Ranger Activities for Ages 15 and Older
Home in the Badlands
Take a virtual tour of Theodore Roosevelt’s Maltese Cross Cabin with Ranger Joe.Click our ranger notepad on the right to print your own page on which to write and/or draw one thing you learn from this tour.
Enjoy Your Outdoors
No matter what your backyard may be – from a meadow to a patio – there’s something living out there!Click our outdoor image on the left to print your own page on which to write and/or draw your backyard.
Wild and Free
Learn about all the wildlife that live in the Badlands!Click our wildlife image on the right to print your own page on which to circle one animal you learned the most about.
Bonus points: are any of these non-native wildlife? Why would the park have non-native wildlife?
Geology Rocks!
What are the Badlands? Excellent question! Explore the geology of Theodore Roosevelt National Park.Click our butte formation image on the left to print your own page on which to answer these two questions; why there are layers of rock and what rocks make up these layers?
Our Night Sky
Explore the park after dark. Learn reasons why our night skies are important and how to protect them.Click our night sky image on the right to print your own page on which to write down one way you can help your night sky at home!
A Lasting Impression
Learn about the lasting effect spending time in the "Cradle of Conservation" had on Theodore Roosevelt.If you were President, what National Monument would you create under the Antiquities Act? Click our Roosevelt in the Badlands picture on the left to write your answer.
Congratulations!
You have completed all the tasks needed to become the newest Junior Ranger of TheodoreRoosevelt National Park.
Now to say the pledge; stand up straight and tall, raise your right hand, and repeat after me...
“I am a Junior Ranger.
I’ll protect this park from danger.
I will not pick the plants.
I won’t step on the ants.
No animals will get my food
And I won’t litter ‘cause it’s rude
My job is never done.
This ranger life is fun!”
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