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Water Everywhere |
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Find out about water without getting wet!
#1. Made of Water
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Water is part of more things than you may think. It’s
even part of you! Your body has more water in it than anything else. Water
mixes with other things so that it often doesn’t look like water – milk and
orange juice are two examples.
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#2. Drip Drop
A faucet leak that can fill up a cup in 10 minutes means that more the
3,000 gallons of water will be wasted in a year. That's about 50,000 glasses of
water!
Find a faucet that leaks around your house, school, or camp. Put a measuring cup
under it and time how long it takes to fill up. Add up how many cups of water
are wasted in a day at this site. Try to get someone to fix the faucet.
#3. Be a Water Saver
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Don’t run the water when you are
brushing your teeth. Start with ½ cup of water (you can add more if you
need to).
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Which two did you choose to do? ___________________________ Think of one more way to save water and write it below. Practice that for two weeks, too. _____________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________ Parent/Adult Signature _______________________
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#4. Water Snooper
To build a water snooper, you will need:
A large can
Clear plastic wrap
Rubber bands
1.
Have someone help you remove both ends of the large can.
2. Take the plastic wrap and put it on one end of the can.
3. Hold it in place with the rubber bands.
4. Use the water snooper to look into a pond or other body of water. Make sure
it doesn't just rest on the surface, but that it goes under the water.
Now, make a water-drop magnifying lens. Take a piece of clear plastic wrap and put two or three drops of water in the middle of it. Hold the plastic over the letters a book. Are they larger? Hold the plastic over other objects. How do they look.
#5. Water Explorer
Visit a pond, lake, small stream, or tidal pool at the seashore with
your troop or group. Look for creatures and plants that live in the water.
You will need:
A strainer
A white plastic bowl with water in it.
Dip
the strainer in the pond or other body of water. You should not go into the
water. Empty what you fine into the white plastic bowl that has water in it. If
you find living things, how do they move? What do the plants in the water look
like?
Look under rocks in the water. Do creatures hide under them or cling to them?
Remember to leave the unit
as you found it.
#6. Water Layers
You can see that salt water is different from fresh water in more ways
than taste.
You will need:
2 glasses
Warm water
Container of salt
Food coloring
Spoon
Measuring Cup
1.
Put 1 cup of water in a glass. Slowly add salt. Keep stirring. Stop when the
salt won't dissolve and stays at the bottom.
2. Add some food coloring to the salty water.
3. Hold the spoon to the top of the water and very slowly pour 1 cup of fresh
water onto the spoon. The fresh water will stay on top, because it is not as
heavy as the salt water.
Now do this experiment in reverse. Add salt water to the fresh water. What happens? Next, try adding cold salty water to warm fresh water. What happens?
Other Helpful Links:
http://www.serviceunit
4.homestead.com/files/envirogames.htm Games
to play with our environment in mind
Water Everywhere -
Drip Drop
Drinking Water...Kid's Stuff
Give Water a Hand
New England Aquarium