The Pocket Book of Garden Experiments

The Pocket Book of Garden Experiments
Author: Helen Pilcher
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 318
Release: 2020-04-30
Genre: Gardening
ISBN: 1472976290

A beautifully designed activity book filled with fascinating garden experiments With 80 experiments for the whole family to discover and enjoy,The Pocket Book of Garden Experiments contains easy-to-follow instructions for activities that will stretch your imagination and bring out your inner scientist. - Make an ecosystem in a jar - Find out why leaves change colour - Turn potatoes into slime - Calculate the heights of trees - Make a sound map of your garden Each experiment takes inspiration from the natural world and the fascinating things that live in it.

The Pocket Book of Garden Experiments

The Pocket Book of Garden Experiments
Author: Helen Pilcher
Publisher:
Total Pages: 192
Release: 2020-05-14
Genre:
ISBN: 9781472976307

With more than 80 experiments for the whole family to discover and enjoy,The Pocket Book of Garden Experiments contains easy-to-follow instructions for activities that will stretch your imagination and bring out your inner scientist.x Make an ecosystem in a jarx Find out why leaves change colourx Turn potatoes into slimex Calculate the heights of treesx Make a sound map of your gardenEach experiment takes inspiration from the natural world and the fascinating things that live in it.

The Pocket Book of Backyard Experiments

The Pocket Book of Backyard Experiments
Author: Helen Pilcher
Publisher: Rizzoli Publications
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2021-10-12
Genre: Science
ISBN: 0789341050

A handy, charmingly designed book filled with more than eighty experiments for the whole family--discover, learn, and enjoy a better understanding of basic garden science. From testing garden soil to making a homemade battery out of a potato, this book reveals the hidden science at work in the garden and around the house. The book is divided into four sections, each focusing on one area: biology, soil science, botany, and "kitchen sink" chemistry. Each experiment is straightforward and easy, involving no more than common household items. Learn how to germinate seeds with little more than envelopes and used egg cartons or amaze friends with the art of optical illusion. While learning how to create a homemade ant farm or making a pressed herbarium specimen, kids get grounded in the basic principles of science. The experiments have been designed as participatory learning activities that bring kids and family members together with the aim of developing young people's learning skills, interest in science, and the world around them.

The Everything Kids' Magical Science Experiments Book

The Everything Kids' Magical Science Experiments Book
Author: Tim Robinson
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
Total Pages: 144
Release: 2007-10
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 159869426X

Contains over fifty science experiments that double as magic tricks, discussing the concepts behind each one and presenting "questions for the scientist," along with thirty puzzles.

Entertaining Science Experiments with Everyday Objects

Entertaining Science Experiments with Everyday Objects
Author: Martin Gardner
Publisher: Courier Corporation
Total Pages: 130
Release: 2013-06-10
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 0486319113

A prominent popular science writer presents simple instructions for 100 illustrated experiments. Memorable, easily understood experiments illuminate principles related to astronomy, chemistry, physiology, psychology, mathematics, topology, probability, acoustics, other areas.

The Mad Science Book

The Mad Science Book
Author: Reto U. Schneider
Publisher: Quercus Books
Total Pages: 296
Release: 2008
Genre: Science
ISBN:

You don't have to be an eccentric obsessive to be a scientist, but it helps... In The Mad Science Book, Reto Schneider tells the extraordinary tales of 100 of the more unusual experiments conducted across seven centuries of science. From the attempts of the 14th-century Dominican monk Theodoric von Freiberg to discover the cause of the rainbow, to the efforts of the 20th-century psychologist Harry Harlow to be the perfect mother to a family of reluctant rhesus monkeys, these are stories that are often bizarre, sometimes mind-boggling - occasionally stomach-churning - but always diverting, informative and enlightening.Among the myriad delights on display in this cabinet of scientific curiosities are the renowned doctor from Padua who sat in a pair of scales for 30 years, recording the minutest changes in his weight; the sheep, the duck and the rooster who became the world's first air passengers; the disgusting Dr Stubbins Ffirth, who swallowed other people's vomit in an attempt to prove that yellow fever cannot be transmitted from one person to another; the hapless soldier Alexis St Martin, left with a hole in his stomach after an accident with a musket; and the ever-optimistic Charles-Édouard Brown-Séquard, who injected himself with essence of guinea pigs' testicles as an anti-ageing remedy. There is trivia here in abundance, but also quirky, but genuinely influential, science, notably Merrill Flood's and Melvin Dresher's experiments with choices of outcomes, which have been widely influential as game theory.A fizzing cocktail of fascinating science and rich entertainment, The Mad Science Book tells the extraordinary stories of some truly, madly, geeky people. It should be top of every self-respecting science buff's Christmas 2008 wishlist.