The Science, Nature & Poetry of. WATER Celia Berrell 2017 part 2

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The Science, Nature & Poetry of WATER Celia Berrell 2017 part 2

WATER molecule H 2 O Atoms and molecules need energy (such as HEAT) in order to move around and change from solid to liquid to gas. HYDROGEN (2) + Oxygen Celia Berrell 2017 part 2

WATER molecules behave a bit like magnets WATER is a POLAR MOLECULE Celia Berrell 2017 part 2

WATER is scientifically WEIRD! Celia Berrell 2017 part 2 A. ICE

Water molecules in a SOLID bond together in spread-out patterns Solid water (ice) has a spreadout structure, compared to other substances. Celia Berrell 2017 part 2

Most other substances have COMPRESSED patterns for molecules in a SOLID Celia Berrell 2017 part 2

Celia Berrell 2017 part 2 Water has EXPANDED patterns for molecules in a SOLID

Celia Berrell 2017 part 2

This makes SOLID water LESS DENSE than liquid water! Celia Berrell 2017 part 2

Celia Berrell 2017 part 12

Celia Berrell 2017 part 2

WATER is scientifically WEIRD! Celia Berrell 2017 part 2 B. VAPOUR

WATER GAS is invisible Celia Berrell 2017 part 2

WATER GAS is also called WATER VAPOUR Celia Berrell 2017 part 2

so what are clouds made of? Celia Berrell 2017 part 2

tiny liquid water droplets Steamy kettle Misty mirror Celia Berrell 2017 part 2 Foggy bathroom shower

Celia Berrell 2017 part 2 mist in the sky

created by condensation Celia Berrell 2017 part 2

Misty Breath by Celia Berrell When morning air is very cold our breath can make a misty cloud. The water vapour from our lungs condenses where cold air s around. Water warmed by blood-hot lungs is energised as water gas but quickly turns to liquid form when cooled by air or things like glass. So breathing on a mirror will create some moist and misty spots as water vapour turns to drops of tiny liquid water dots. In colder climes in olden times if you were ill and looked like death they d place a little mirror by your open mouth to check for breath. Celia Berrell 2017 part 2

WATER in nature Celia Berrell 2017 part 2 C. THE WATER CYCLE

Life-Friendly Water Facts A baby is 75% water A potato is 79% water A banana is 74% water An old person is less than 60% water Water covers 70% of Earth s surface 96.5% is in the salty seas 3.2% is underground or in glaciers Less than 1% is available as fresh water Celia Berrell 2017 part 2

Celia Berrell 2017 part 2 http://www.ngdir.ir/sitelinks/kids/html/l02.htm

Celia Berrell 2017 part 2 http://moodleblogs.dearbornschools.org/wp3-qkzljj81/chapter/the-water-cycle/

Celia Berrell 2017 part 2 http//ga.water.usgs.gov/edu/watercycle.html

Camel Calamity by Celia Berrell There s lots of desert area throughout outback Australia. It rarely rains, but water s found in tables hiding underground. The settlements and tiny towns have had to dig a long way down installing pumps to push it up to give them water from a tap. Of all the animals nearby there s one that copes well in the dry. A camel can last two whole weeks before a water source it seeks. And recently they ve learnt a trick that helps them get a big long drink. By walking into some small town and turning on the taps they ve found. Celia Berrell 2017 part 1 This causes a calamity as precious water s running free. A camel isn t smart enough to know those taps need turning off! Image from The Touch Gallery

WATER GALLERY Celia Berrell 2017 part 2 icebergs

Celia Berrell 2017 part 2 glaciers

Celia Berrell 2017 part 2 frost

Celia Berrell 2017 part 2 Ice flowers

Celia Berrell 2017 part 2 icicles

Celia Berrell 2017 part 2 snow

Celia Berrell 2017 part 2

http://www.snowcrystals.com/designer/designer.html Celia Berrell 2017 part 2 snow crystals

Celia Berrell 2017 part 2 mist

Celia Berrell 2017 part 2 steam

Celia Berrell 2017 part 2 clouds

Celia Berrell 2017 part 2 dew

A Recipe for Dew by Celia Berrell A recent rain to quench and share. A cloudless night to cool the air. The slightest breeze to chill on cue the grass and leaves. Here comes the dew. The stage is set for dawn s sensation. Jewel-studded condensation. Blanket-strewn on grassy stems are rainbow-sparkling water gems. Celia Berrell 2017 part 2 First published in CSIRO s Scientriffic issue 85 May 2013

Celia Berrell 2017 part 2 river

Celia Berrell 2017 part 2 lake

Celia Berrell 2017 part 2 sea

Celia Berrell 2017 part 2 waves

Celia Berrell 2017 part 2 ripples

Celia Berrell 2017 part 2 raindrops

SHAPE ME A RAINDROP Depending on the temperatures and air pressures in a raincloud, the falling water could be liquid or solid. What shape do you think a liquid raindrop is? Well, they re not pointed at the top like a teardrop shape! The smallest raindrops are spherical, like a blueberry. Slightly bigger drops are shaped like the top-half of a burger bun. Bigger still, and a raindrop will spread out like a pancake as it falls through the air. If raindrops get too big, they will break up into two or more smaller droplets again. But before they do, some of them make the shape of a parachute. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/drop_(liquid) Image sourced from Science ABC Image of a raindrop falling: by Professor Emmanuel Villermaux (Photo sourced from Live Science) Celia Berrell 2017 part 2 raindrops

Blueberry Pancakes & Parachutes by Celia Berrell Shimmering streaks of morning-time rain puddling into the mud. reminds me of blueberry pancakes and circular see-through parachutes. Raindrops aren t teardrops. There s no pointy tip. Those free-falling globules are blueberry round. But if they meet up as they fall through the sky a middle-sized raindrop as-flat-as-a-pancake might suddenly start to appear. Celia Berrell 2017 part 2 raindrops https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/drop_(liquid)

Blueberry Pancakes & Parachutes by Celia Berrell (continued) Bigger and larger and bulkier still fast-falling raindrops past-pancake-proportions will stretch in the centre and drag through the air. For less than a second becoming a dome these small glassy parachutes wobble then burst to break into blueberry droplets again. Image of a raindrop falling: by Professor Emmanuel Villermaux (Photo sourced from Live Science) Celia Berrell 2017 part 2 raindrops

Cyclone typhoon tsunami Celia Berrell 2017 part 2 flood

Celia Berrell 2017 part 2 waterfall

WATER Part 2 Ice - Vapour - The Water Cycle for National Science Week 2017 sharing science rhymes and science information for Whitfield State School s POETRY CLUB Includes poems by Celia Berrell: Ice Floats Misty Breath Camel Calamity Snowflake Nucleation A Recipe for Dew Blueberry Pancakes and Parachutes Website links referenced: http://www.ngdir.ir/sitelinks/kids/html/l02.htm http//ga.water.usgs.gov/edu/watercycle.html http://www.snowcrystals.com/designer/designer.html http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-12-26/uluru-closed-homes-damagedby-flashfloods-in-central-australia/8148430 And thank you to all the creative artists who donate their images free of charge via Microsoft ClipArt & www.morguefile.com

Celia Berrell writes Her poems are found in CSIRO s Double Helix magazines and school textbooks Australia Ireland Canada India Malaysia and YOUR POEMS can be shared on the Science Rhymes website www.sciencerhymes.com.au