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Further Information |
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Physical Environment > Water |
![]() | Basic Chemistry (7th Edition)Click for detailsG. William Daub et al December 1996 |
![]() | Biochemistry (4th edition)Click for detailsLubert Stryer |
![]() | Camsoft Molecular Drawing SoftwareUse your PC to create images of molecules. All the molecular images on this web site were created with Chem3D or ChemDraw. Special prices are available for students and home users, including occasional free software offers.
This site is highly recommended if you want to play with molecules on your computer. |
![]() | Goose Eggs Hot Frosty Science KitClick for detailsFrom the Wild Goose 3 in 1 Science Kit series comes Hot Frosty, the kit that experiments with how chemical reactions can affect temperatures and the atmosphere. Says the manufacturer: "Make a blizzard in a tropical test tube." What experimenters actually do is perform a hands-on study of the opposing reactions of cool and hot, a demonstration of what happens when water mixes with ammonium nitrate and calcium chloride. To find out what happens, you have to have a kit--and an adult to guide the experiment along. Wild Goose is dedicated to the principle of "real science, real fun." This kit provides both! Adult supervision is recommended. |
![]() | High School Science CD-ROMClick for details |
![]() | Newton's Apple Kits: Newton in the TubClick for details"Water is liquid science!" The gang from the popular PBS science show Newton's Apple brings you Newton in the Tub, winner of the 1997 Dr. Toy Best Vacation Product award. These science experiments are perfect for the bathtub, sink, or swimming pool. The kit includes a funny instruction booklet, and things like plastic tubing, Styrofoam balls, balloons, corks, and rubber bands to help you figure out the properties of liquids and basic experiments. Settle important bath-time questions like whether things actually weigh less in water, how a siphon works, what makes stuff float or sink, and why water molecules like to hang out together. Kids can make super-soaking squirt devices, a spinning sprinkler, and a Popsicle-stick paddleboat. But the best part of this liquid laboratory is, without doubt, the bubbles. Using the bottles of liquid soap and glycerin along with the bits of wire and string included in the kit, you can produce some incredibly advanced bubbles like magic circles and even squares! For more chemistry fun, check out Newton on Slime and Oooh Aaah Chemistry. (Ages 8 and older, adult supervision required) |
![]() | Oceans CD-ROMClick for details |
These suggest that liquid water may be lurking just below the Martian surface, say researchers Dr Michael Malin and Dr Kenneth Edgett in a paper published in the journal Science.
![]() | Wild Science OozologyClick for detailsMake your own drippy elastic slime and semi-solids. Theatrical effects and more. |
Physical Environment > Water |
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