3 rd grade science for the year my science powerpoint noah 2009

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3rd Grade Science For The Year

My Science PowerPoint

Noah2009

Plants of San Diego County

Sabrina & Noah

Common name: Mule Fat

• Latin name: Baccharis salicifolia

• Where it can be found: along stream banks

• On the next slides are pictures

Common name: Miner’s lettuce

• Latin name: Claytonia parviflora Hook

• Where you can find it: marshy creek sides in forests.

• In the next slides I will show you pictures

Common name: Western Cottonwood

• Latin name: Populus

• Where you can find it: Valley grassland

• In the next slides I’ll show you pictures

Common name: Black Sage

• Latin name: mellifera

• Where you can find it: dry slopes

• In the next slides I will show you pictures

Common name: White Sage

• Latin name: apiana

• Where you can find it: dry slopes

• In the next slides I will show you pictures

Common name: Mohave Yucca

• Latin name: schidigera

• Where you can find it: desert

• In the next slides I will show you pictures

Common name: Laurel Sumac also known as the Taco Plant

• Latin name: Laurel Sumac

• Where you can find it: Dry ridges and canyons

• In the next slides I will show you pictures

Common name: Poison Oak

• Latin name: diversilobum

• Where you can find it: oak woodlands

• In the next slides I will show you pictures

Common name: Lemonade Berry

• Latin name: Rhus integrifolia

• Where you can find it: dry places

• In the next slides I will show you pictures

Broom Baccharis

• Latin name: Broom Baccharis

• Where you can find it: sandy washes

• In the next slides I will show you pictures

Common Name: California Aster

• Latin Name: Lessingia, Filaginifolia

• Where you can find it: Coastal Sage Scrub, Coastal Salt Marsh, Freshwater Marsh, Mixed-Evergreens Forest and Southern Oak Woodland

California Aster

Common Name :San Diego Sun Flower

• Latin Name :Vincio

• Where you can find it: Coastal Sage Scrub

San Diego Sunflower

Common Name: California Sunflower

• Latin Name:

• Where you can find it: Foothill Woodland, Valley Grassland, Freshwater-Wetlands

California Sunflower

Common Name: Barrel Cactus

• Latin Name: Ferocactus cylindraceus

• Where you can find it: South McCullough Wilderness

Barrel Cactus

Common Name: Morning-Glory

• Latin Name: Convolvere

• Where you can find it: Coastal Sage

Morning-Glory

Common Name: Deer Weed

• Latin Name: Scoparius

• Where you can find it: Dry Slopes

Deer Weed

Common Name: Wild-Cucumber

• Latin Name: Marah

• Where you can find it: Ventilated Areas

Wild Cucumber

Coast Live Oak

• Latin Name: Qurcus

• Where can you find it: Bay area and coast

Nuttall's Scrub Oak

• Latin name: Lotus Nuttallianus

• Where you can find it: Sandy soils, sandstone slopes of Costal Sage Scrub, Chaparral below 7000

Dodder

• Latin name: californica

• Where you can find it: Colorado State

This is an Excel graph on inches of water in months. (This isn’t real data).

Noah

6 5 6 710

13

16 1618

15

8 7

0

5

10

15

20

Jan

Feb

Mar

Apr

May Ju

n

Jul

Aug

Sep Oct

Nov

Dec

Months

Day

s o

f R

ain

Record Grooves

Pictures of Compact Discs

Picture of Argentine Ants

This is a picture of Army ants attacking one Argentine ant.

This is a picture of Argentine ants teaming up to kill another ant.

Fire ants killing a beetle.

This is a queen Argentina ant.

Argentine Ants with Their Queen

This is a diagram of an Argentine Ant.

Water has something called surface tension. Surface tension is like a thin blanket of water on the

surface. It allows you to break the rule of density. Right now I will

show you an experiment.

Here are the materials you will need.

First you get the cup of water and try very slowly to put the paperclip in.

Once you get the paperclip to float because of surface tension, you put

soap in. Then you notice the paperclip will sink. That is because the soap broke the surface tension.

1.5 V

Battery

Light bulb

Negative

Positive

Electrical Circuit

Venus

Moon

Jupiter

Planets Moving West

This is a oF and oC thermometer.

Today we will be

focusing on the Celsius

side.

If it was at 0 degrees in Celsius water would freeze.

Ya!! Just like that!!

If it was at 100 degrees Celsius water

would boil.Like that too!

Hey. Where do these pop

ups keep coming from?

That will conclude our lesson for today!!! Oops, we must go on.

Now I will show you different pictures of constellations.

Next I will show you how light from the sun comes to the human eye.

In the next slide I will show you a telescope site.

Next you will see the moon revolving around the earth.

Next you will see a schedule of the moons phases.

Nov 2008

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat

           1

        2

        3

        4

        5

        6

        7

        8

        9

        10

        11

        12

        13

        14

        15

        16

        17

        18

        19

        20

        21

        22

        23

        24

        25

        26

        27

        28

        29

        30

       

E

W

The Sun’s Summer Path

E

W

The Sun’s Winter Path

The Moon’s Phases

New Moon - The Moon's illuminated side is facing the Earth. The Moon is not visible (except during a solar eclipse).

Waxing Crescent - The Moon appears to be partly but less than one-half illuminated by direct sunlight. The fraction of the Moon's disk that is illuminated is increasing.

First Quarter - One-half of the Moon appears to be illuminated by direct sunlight. The fraction of the Moon's disk that is illuminated is increasing.

Waxing Gibbous - The Moon appears to be more than one-half but not fully illuminated by direct sunlight. The fraction of the Moon's disk that is illuminated is increasing

Full Moon - The Moon's illuminated side is facing the Earth. The Moon appears to be completely illuminated by direct sunlight.

Waning Gibbous - The Moon appears to be more than one-half but not fully illuminated by direct sunlight. The fraction of the Moon's disk that is illuminated is decreasing.

Last Quarter - One-half of the Moon appears to be illuminated by direct sunlight. The fraction of the Moon's disk that is illuminated is decreasing.

Waning Crescent - The Moon appears to be partly but less than one-half illuminated by direct sunlight. The fraction of the Moon's disk that is

illuminated is decreasing.

New Moon - The Moon's unilluminated side is facing the Earth. The Moon is not visible (except during a solar eclipse).

With All Those Phases Together It Will Look Something Like This.

Gravity

• Without gravity we would be flying in the air and so would everything else.

• You have to be very thankful for the Earth’s gravity.

With a balloon like this one that

has something

heavy attached to it, it will fall.

With a balloon like this that has helium, without some- thing to weigh it down will go up because of a force called lift.

A Balloon Is Made Out Of Helium

• Helium is the second lightest element in the periodic table of elements, and is what you put in balloons. The reason it goes up is because helium is lighter than air. The chemical sign for it is He.

Helium

In the next slide I will show you the Winter Constellation Orion.

Stellarium

Sound

Light

Chemical

Stored

Kinetic

Electrical

Heat

Nuclear

Energy

Food

Natural gas

Gasoline

Wood

Chemical energy

The Periodic table of elements.

This is a…

!!!

This is how it works.

You put an object on the pan, then you move the masses until it is in line with the balance mark.

Then you know how much it weighs!

These are the ancient Greek elements.

Fire Water Earth Air

These are graduated cylinders.

O ops.

You use graduated cylinders do measure like water like this.

First you pour water in the

cylinder.

Then you see how many mL of

water you poured, then your

done and you can eat some

cookies! Hooray!

States of Matter in a Microscopic View

Solid Liquid Gas

This is copper at room temperature.

This is copper heated hotter.

And this is copper extremely hot.

Solid

Liquid

Gas

+ Heat =

+ Heat =

- Heat =

An experiment not to try at home.In this experiment you will see what

happens when something is heated or cooled.

These are the materials.

First you make sure the brass ball can fit into the brass circle.

Then you torch the ball.

Then when you try to fit it in again, it won’t fit.

Then to cool down the ball and make it smaller you put the ball in

water.

My table is five and a half FEET long.

How We Get Energy

First the sun shines heat and light, two types of energy, and the energy goes to the

earth.

Energy

Then plants absorb the energy.

Next animals like cows eat the plant and get the energy.

Then when cows produces milk, the

energy is converted into it.

Then when we drink the milk we get the energy! This process can happen with

different animals too.

A type of kinetic energy are waves.

For example, when you drop a a penny in water, the energy

is waves.

If you were to cut a copper wire in half a lot of times, you would end

up with an atom.

Atom

An experiment (don’t try this at your house.) r

5 mL of B

aking Soda

50 mL of vinegar

February 26,27,and28’s moon in 2009.

This is an animation of the Big Dipper.

If you haven’t noticed, these stars always points to the North Star.

One of our most powerful telescopes is the Meade

Telescope.

This is a picture of the view of the Meade Telescope.

This is the device named after Kepler.

This is Johannes Kepler.

This device was named after Kepler because Kepler discovered

the planetary laws of motion.• LAUNCH INFORMATION

Launch date/time: No earlier than 2009 March 6 at 10:48 pm ESTTo find out any official changes in launch time, see NASA Launch Schedule page.

L-14 (14 days before launch) Press Conference Media Resources

...full Press Kit (3 Mb pdf)Johannes Kepler was born at 2:30 PM on December 27, 1571, in Weil der Stadt

Botany

Blood Red Distictis

Embryo

Cotyledon

More plant pictures

Fruits that have seeds.

Orange

Apple

Avocado

Strawberry

Pear

Tomato

Watermelon

Raspberry

Blackberry

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