• Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Activity, Change, Progress

  • HOME
  • How to
    • Preschool
    • Kindergarten
    • Middle School
    • High School
  • Planner
  • Lapbooks
    • Trioramas
    • History Games
  • Shop
  • GET STARTED NOW!
    • Learning Styles
  • 7 Step Planner
    • DIY Best Student Planner
    • Free & Easy DIY Home Management Binder
  • Unit Studies
    • Creation to Ancients
    • Middle Ages to Reform
    • Exploring to Revolution
    • World Wars to Today
    • Science
    • Free Art Curriculum Grades 1 – 8
  • Curriculum
    • More Unit Studies
    • Geography
    • Writing PreK to 12th
    • Geronimo Stilton
  • BootCamp
    • Resources
      • Dynamic Subscriber Freebies
      • Exclusive Subscribers Library
      • Ultimate Unit Study Planner

tundra

How to Make an Easy 3D Tundra Biome Poster Project

August 7, 2023 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Creating a 3d tundra biome poster project is a fun challenge if your studying biomes. Too, you’ll love my Arctic and Inuit Unit Study. Free Lapbook – Hands-on Ideas and my Arctic Region pages.

Also, it’s a great hands-on project.

This project is part art and part science.

Too, it is a great creative writing challenge and teaches your kids about advertising as well.

How to Make an Easy 3D Tundra Biome Poster Project

It is much more exciting to research the tundra biome to create a travel poster to entice visitors to come and see what it offers through images and inviting words than just fill in a worksheet.

You can use printed photos of animals found in the tundra or to make it a truly 3D poster and attach small animals throughout the scene.

Also, because we are advertising the tundra as a whole, we do have some animals from both of the different types of tundra mixed into the scene.

Facts About The Tundra Biome

  • Tundra comes from the Finnish word tunturi, which means- treeless plain.
  • The tundra covers about one fifth of the land on earth.
  • The tundra is the coldest of the biomes, the average temperature there is around -18 degrees F.
  • It is also about as dry as a desert, getting only around 10 inches of precipitation a year, and most of this is snow.
  • There are 2 different types of tundra biomes:
  • Alpine tundra, the area of land high in the mountains above the treeline.
  • Arctic tundra – Far north in the northern hemisphere along the Arctic Circle.
  • Polar bears come to the tundra in the summer, this is where they have their babies.
  • Most of the vegetation that grows in this inhospitable area is sedge, moss, lichen, dwarf shrub, and grass.
  • The growing season in the tundra is very short, it usually lasts just 6 to 10 weeks.
How to Make an Easy 3D Tundra Biome Poster Project

Then look at some of the animals in the tundra.

Animals of the Tundra

The type of animals and vegetation you find will depend on if it is Arctic, Alpine, or Antarctic tundra. Here are a few examples of each:

Arctic:

  • Beluga Whale
  • Snowy Owl
  • Snowshoe Hair
  • Walrus

Alpine:

  • Mountain Goat
  • Bighorn Sheep
  • Canadian Lynx
  • Elk

Antarctic:

  • Chinstrap Penguin
  • Leopard Seal
  • Arctic Tern
  • Spectacled Porpoise

Also, add some of these fun books to your reading day.

Books About the Tundra

Look at some of these books, resources, and fun things to add to your study of the tundra.

A Walk in the Tundra (Biomes of North America)

Take a walk on the tundra. In this cold, harsh biome on the top of the world, summer is short. How do plants and animals of the tundra live? Discover how they depend on each other for survival as you travel through this fascinating land.

Mini Arctic 10PCS Polar Animal Figurines Includes Polar Bear Seal Reindeer Wolf Rabbit Arctic Fox Igloo

Included-10 arctic animal toy set including 1 polar bear, 1 reindeer, 1 arctic hare, 1 arctic wolf, 1 walrus, 1 beluga, 1 killer whale, 1 arctic fox, 1 arctic seal , 1 igloo model.

Arctic Tundra

It’s a land of riddles, where a winter night can last for weeks and where the ground is full of water though it rarely rains or snows. Bears, hares, wolves, and foxes roam the ice-crusted earth, as flowers follow the sun as it moves across the sky. Young readers may never come to the Arctic tundra, but now it can come to them―in a book chock full of fun-to-do experiments and activities for children ages 6 and up that help them to solve some of the mysteries of this strange and forbidding world. Arctic Tundra includes a picture field guide, a glossary-index, and a resource list.

More Ideas for a Tundra Biome Poster Project

Also, look at more ideas to add to your poster project.

  • 20 Amazing Animals In The Tundra
  • Ideas for a tundra diorama
  • Tundra Biome: Interesting Info About its Plants and Animals

Finally, look how to make this fun poster.

How to Make a 3D Tundra Biome Poster Project

You will need:

  • Trifold science board or foam board
  • Plastic Tundra Animals or printouts
  • Tacky glue or Hot Glue
  • Cotton balls, white tissue paper, cotton fill
  • Craft paint/paint brushes
How to Make an Easy 3D Tundra Biome Poster Project

First, water down a light blue craft paint and paint a very light coat over all or most of your board.

Leave a little room at the top for your information. You don’t want to saturate it too much because it is cardboard and will warp if soaked.

How to Make an Easy 3D Tundra Biome Poster Project

Allow it to dry.

Tear cotton balls into smaller wisps.

How to Make an Easy 3D Tundra Biome Poster Project

“Paint” your ground area and any hills or mountains with a thick coat of tacky glue.

How to Make an Easy 3D Tundra Biome Poster Project

Press torn cotton balls into it for snow.

How to Make an Easy 3D Tundra Biome Poster Project

Add some clouds if you like. Allow glue to dry.

Paint some ocean in your scenery to add aquatic and semi aquatic animals.

How to Make an Easy 3D Tundra Biome Poster Project

Gather up your animals.

How to Make an Easy 3D Tundra Biome Poster Project

Hot glue them in various places around the scene.

To remove the hot glue once you are done with the project, just pull them off the poster and heat the glue with a blow dryer until it softens a bit and you can pull the excess glue right off.

How to Make an Easy 3D Tundra Biome Poster Project

Use letter stickers to create an interesting and eye-catching title.

How to Make an Easy 3D Tundra Biome Poster Project

Add more details like catchy words or phrases to describe the tundra around the board.

How to Make an Easy 3D Tundra Biome Poster Project

Have your child write or type up a paragraph to play up the positives of the tundra, just like a travel agency would hype up the location they are advertising. You might also have them research and list some locations that the tundra biome is located.

Print, cut, and attach your “advertising”.

How to Make an Easy 3D Tundra Biome Poster Project

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Hands-On Activities Tagged With: arctic, biome, earth science, earthscience, hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, life science, science, tundra

Primary Sidebar

Footer

Privacy Policy | About Me | Reviews | Contact | Advertise

Categories

Archives

Tina Robertson is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to amazon.com. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.

Copyright © 2025 · 5 TNT LLC · Log in · Privacy Policy