7th Grade Honors Science
Wednesday, November 15, 2006
Wednesday 11/15/06
What was done?
What was collected?.
What was assigned?
Daily Science Fact
Sea Monkeys are really a type of brine shrimp, and brine shrimp are an incredibly cool life form. Brine shrimp are naturally found in salt lakes, like the Great Salt Lake in Utah. In a salt lake like this, the water is so salty that the only things living in it are the brine shrimp and certain types of algae on which the brine shrimp feed.
- We continued workbook pages for Sections 19-1 & 2.
- We worked on the story "Journey of the Red Blood Cell".
What was collected?.
- Cardiovascular system extra credit.
- Completed Bill Nye: Heart notes.
What was assigned?
- Rough draft of the "Journey of a Red Blood Cell".
Daily Science Fact
Sea Monkeys are really a type of brine shrimp, and brine shrimp are an incredibly cool life form. Brine shrimp are naturally found in salt lakes, like the Great Salt Lake in Utah. In a salt lake like this, the water is so salty that the only things living in it are the brine shrimp and certain types of algae on which the brine shrimp feed.
One of the things that make brine shrimp fascinating is their ability to lay encapsulated eggs called cysts. A cyst can dry out and remain viable for years. If you put brine shrimp cysts in salt water, they hatch very quickly, and the shrimp mature in about eight days. They can grow to be pretty big -- about half an inch (15 mm) long.
posted by Mr. Kang at 8:30 PM
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