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The Amazing Fossil Book Giveaway – Growing With Science Blog
http://blog.growingwithscience.com/2013/11/amazing-fossil-book-giveaway
Growing With Science Blog. Bug of the Week Archive. Science Books For Kids. Seed of the Week Archive. The Amazing Fossil Book Giveaway. November 22, 2013. We have a special book for STEM Friday today. By Bill Thomson is simply, "Wow! Because it is a wordless book, the reader is the one who develops the story based on the illustrations. It can change every time you read the book. The book trailer is a great way to see how it can work:. By the way, Bill Thomson's. Would you like to win a copy? They are vas...
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Experiment Archive – Growing With Science Blog
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Growing With Science Blog. Bug of the Week Archive. Science Books For Kids. Seed of the Week Archive. Below is a summary of the science experiment or activity blog posts, organized by topic. Classification of Living Things. A Fungus Among Us. Making a spore print. What's Under a Rock? Plant Science Unit Lessons:. Preface: inspired by the. Introduction: What is a plant? What is a Seed? Plant Science in Space. Roots, leaves, stems, etc.). Inside Plants (Leaf and cell anatomy). Plant Families II. Trees.
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Bug of the Week – Growing With Science Blog
http://blog.growingwithscience.com/category/insects
Growing With Science Blog. Bug of the Week Archive. Science Books For Kids. Seed of the Week Archive. Bug of the Week. Bug of the Week: Cicada Nymph Exoskeletons. August 17, 2016. Insects can interfere with exercise. For example, these light-colored objects on the dark bark of a mesquite caught my eye and I had to run home and grab my camera. Do you recognize it? Here, look closer. It's the exoskeleton shed by a cicada turning from a nymph into an adult. Can you see the covering where the eyes were?
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Shield-backed Bugs – Growing With Science Blog
http://blog.growingwithscience.com/tag/shield-backed-bugs
Growing With Science Blog. Bug of the Week Archive. Science Books For Kids. Seed of the Week Archive. Tag Archives: Shield-backed Bugs. Bug of the Week: Shield-backed Bug. May 20, 2015. After so many years of taking photographs of insects in the immediate area, it is still possible to find something new. Take for example this brown bug I found on the petals of a Mexican hat flower. It turned out to be a shield-backed bug, family Scutelleridae. Have you seen any interesting insects this week? May 20, 2015.
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mystery seed – Growing With Science Blog
http://blog.growingwithscience.com/tag/mystery-seed
Growing With Science Blog. Bug of the Week Archive. Science Books For Kids. Seed of the Week Archive. Tag Archives: mystery seed. Mystery Seed of the Week: Seed Identification Resources. August 11, 2015. I'm afraid I don't have any mystery seeds in the queue this week. If you'd like to polish your seed identification skills while you wait, try some of these online seed identification resources:. The University of Kentucky has seed identification information and quizzes. Basic Seed ID quiz. August 11, 2015.
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insects – Growing With Science Blog
http://blog.growingwithscience.com/category/insects/insects-insects-2
Growing With Science Blog. Bug of the Week Archive. Science Books For Kids. Seed of the Week Archive. Bug of the Week: Cicada Nymph Exoskeletons. August 17, 2016. Insects can interfere with exercise. For example, these light-colored objects on the dark bark of a mesquite caught my eye and I had to run home and grab my camera. Do you recognize it? Here, look closer. It's the exoskeleton shed by a cicada turning from a nymph into an adult. Can you see the covering where the eyes were? Where did you find it?
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thyme – Growing With Science Blog
http://blog.growingwithscience.com/tag/thyme
Growing With Science Blog. Bug of the Week Archive. Science Books For Kids. Seed of the Week Archive. Seed of the Week: Thyme. May 19, 2015. Our tiny mystery seeds from last week. Were from thyme, Thymus. Thyme is a small, evergreen perennial plant with tiny delicate leaves, which grows to only about 12 inches tall. It has been selected from wild plants originally found in southern Europe. Public domain illustration from Franz Eugen Köhler, Köhler's Medizinal-Pflanzen, Wikimedia. Do you grow thyme? Afric...
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Seed of the Week: Creosote Bush – Growing With Science Blog
http://blog.growingwithscience.com/2012/04/seed-of-the-week-creosote-bush
Growing With Science Blog. Bug of the Week Archive. Science Books For Kids. Seed of the Week Archive. Seed of the Week: Creosote Bush. April 3, 2012. Our fuzzy mystery seeds from last week. Were from a creosote bush,. It probably have been easier to recognize the seed capsules if I had shown them on the plant, like in the photograph above. Creosote bushes are common shrubs in low deserts throughout the Southwest. What do you think of creosote bushes? Posted in Seed of the Week. Seed of the Week. Spectacu...
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Thymus sp. – Growing With Science Blog
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Growing With Science Blog. Bug of the Week Archive. Science Books For Kids. Seed of the Week Archive. Tag Archives: Thymus sp. Seed of the Week: Thyme. May 19, 2015. Our tiny mystery seeds from last week. Were from thyme, Thymus. Thyme is a small, evergreen perennial plant with tiny delicate leaves, which grows to only about 12 inches tall. It has been selected from wild plants originally found in southern Europe. Public domain illustration from Franz Eugen Köhler, Köhler's Medizinal-Pflanzen, Wikimedia.
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Seed of the Week – Growing With Science Blog
http://blog.growingwithscience.com/category/seed-of-the-week
Growing With Science Blog. Bug of the Week Archive. Science Books For Kids. Seed of the Week Archive. Seed of the Week. Seed to Seed: Where We Go Next. September 1, 2015. After 257 Mystery Seed of the Week. Posts, it seemed like it was time for a change. But what to do next? The answer was inspired by a book,. Seed to Seed: The Secret Life of Plants. The plant they chose to investigate was thale-cress, Arabidopsis thaliana. Public domain illustration of Arabidopsis thaliana. Rather than moving randomly f...