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Kids Projects at Home

Simple Kids Crafts is a video blog dedicated to reviving the old art of handicrafts for people of all ages. How do oil spills affect aquatic plants? A Miniature Solar Panel Fire Water Balloon Make Clouds in a Bottle Secret Messages Make a Rocket Make a Hovercraft Make an Anemometer Make a Sundial Make a Radio Make an Electroscope Make a Stethoscope Make a Telescope Make a Periscope Make a Camera Bending a stream of water with a comb Lighting a bulb without electricity Simple Motor Cotton Ball Rocks? Salt-Absorbing Art and Science Color Changing Glue Art Baking Soda Clay Oil Sun Catcher Grow a Pineapple Plant! Bead Bowls Wow, what an Air-Gun Funny Diver ! Water boils without fire Ice with Boiling Water Water that boils instantly Water boils in a Paper Pot Soap-driven Boat Pulse Moves Pin Pretty Garden—without Plants Picture made by Fire Magic Pictures Dancing Doll Smoke Goes Down The Dancing Coupl The Umbrella Dance Magic Butterfly Colorful ...

Magic Pictures !

Articles Required : Two books, one glass sheet, cork, brush, a little glycerine. With the help of brush and glyce­rine, make a figure on the glass sheet. Now, show it to the specta­tors from the reverse side. And take care to keep the light source also on the reverse side. First grate the cork into fine, smaller pieces. You can do this with the help of a grater used in the kit­chen. Put these pieces between the books and then draw the figure on the glass sheet as described above. Now lift the top book and put glass sheet on the cork pieces with the glycerine-coated side facing downwards. If you start rubbing the sheet' top with woollen cloth, it would be charged with electricity.. As a result, the cork dust would get stuck to the glass. But when the rubbing is stopped, most of the dust would drop back on the table, except from the glycerine-coated part. Now lift the sheet and blow off the extra cork dust around the figure. Your picture is ready. A magic pic­ture for ...

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Make a Rocket

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Earth Science Projects

Use the below given Earth science experiments to help students age 10 and up learn the history and workings of the Earth system Bam The Strength of Rocks Landslides The Fingerprints of Erosion The Greenhouse Effect Seeing Through the Haze The Magic of Metal Corrosion Agent Sodium Chloride Strikes Again Steel and Acid Rain Seismology Recorder

Make a Periscope

Are you familiar with the word "submarine"? A submarine is a kind of boat that moves underwater. Submarines are common crafts for the Naval forces of any country. But, while moving underwater, submarines need to know where they are with respect to other objects on the surface of water. The device they use to do this is called a periscope.  Periscopes are optical instruments that can afford submariners a limited though vital visual picture outside their windowless hull. Traditionally, periscopes offered the submerged submarine its only glimpse of the outside world. Classic English war movies have also made them the submarine's most familiar feature.  For most of us, who are unlikely to come across submarines in real life, a periscope can make it possible to see round corners and over the heads of crowds during processions or at sporting occasions. In a periscope, two mirrors are arranged at 45 degrees to each other. One mirror captures the rays of light from t...