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Stream Table Lab
Stream Table Lab
Stream Table Lab
Stream Table Lab
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Description

This is a lab for students to visualize erosion and deposition by water using a stream table. You can either use a standard stream table like THIS ONE or build your own using large dissecting trays and buckets at the end.

The lab includes:

  • a materials list (you will have to make water bottles with holes in the bottom to simulate a "normal" and "flood" rain event.
  • Instructions for the lab
  • Questions. I typically have each student trade off roles each round, so you see each student's handwriting on the lab that they turn in as a team.

Related Products in this unit:

1 - Weathering: Google Slides, Guided Notes, Lab, & Lab for absent students

2 - Weathering: Practice Identifying Weathering, Lab, & Card Sort

3 - Erosion & Deposition: Notes, Guided notes, & Puzzle

4- Stream Table Lab

5- Erosion & Deposition: Scavenger Hunt & Formative Assessment

6 - Erosion & coastlines: How natural disasters impact coastal erosion

7 - Sea Level Rise webquest and mitigation measures

8 - Seawall Debate

9 - Unit 3: Mountains, Valleys, & Coasts Study Guide

Report this resource to TPT
Reported resources will be reviewed by our team. Report this resource to let us know if this resource violates TPT's content guidelines.

Stream Table Lab

Smiths Science Class
20 Followers
$3.00

Highlights

Digital downloads
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Grades
7th - 12th
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Standards
Teaching Duration
90 minutes

Save even more with bundles

This bundle contains all of the lessons from the unit Mountains, Valleys, and Coasts. This unit focuses on weathering and erosion as well as how natural disasters are impacting human development. Products in this unit:1 - Weathering: Google Slides, Guided Notes, Lab, & Lab for absent students2
Price $28.80Original Price $32.00Save $3.20
9

Description

This is a lab for students to visualize erosion and deposition by water using a stream table. You can either use a standard stream table like THIS ONE or build your own using large dissecting trays and buckets at the end.

The lab includes:

  • a materials list (you will have to make water bottles with holes in the bottom to simulate a "normal" and "flood" rain event.
  • Instructions for the lab
  • Questions. I typically have each student trade off roles each round, so you see each student's handwriting on the lab that they turn in as a team.

Related Products in this unit:

1 - Weathering: Google Slides, Guided Notes, Lab, & Lab for absent students

2 - Weathering: Practice Identifying Weathering, Lab, & Card Sort

3 - Erosion & Deposition: Notes, Guided notes, & Puzzle

4- Stream Table Lab

5- Erosion & Deposition: Scavenger Hunt & Formative Assessment

6 - Erosion & coastlines: How natural disasters impact coastal erosion

7 - Sea Level Rise webquest and mitigation measures

8 - Seawall Debate

9 - Unit 3: Mountains, Valleys, & Coasts Study Guide

Report this resource to TPT
Reported resources will be reviewed by our team. Report this resource to let us know if this resource violates TPT's content guidelines.

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Standards

to see state-specific standards (only available in the US).
NGSSHS-ESS2-5
Plan and conduct an investigation of the properties of water and its effects on Earth materials and surface processes. Emphasis is on mechanical and chemical investigations with water and a variety of solid materials to provide the evidence for connections between the hydrologic cycle and system interactions commonly known as the rock cycle. Examples of mechanical investigations include stream transportation and deposition using a stream table, erosion using variations in soil moisture content, or frost wedging by the expansion of water as it freezes. Examples of chemical investigations include chemical weathering and recrystallization (by testing the solubility of different materials) or melt generation (by examining how water lowers the melting temperature of most solids).
NGSSHS-ESS3-1
Construct an explanation based on evidence for how the availability of natural resources, occurrence of natural hazards, and changes in climate have influenced human activity. Examples of key natural resources include access to fresh water (such as rivers, lakes, and groundwater), regions of fertile soils such as river deltas, and high concentrations of minerals and fossil fuels. Examples of natural hazards can be from interior processes (such as volcanic eruptions and earthquakes), surface processes (such as tsunamis, mass wasting and soil erosion), and severe weather (such as hurricanes, floods, and droughts). Examples of the results of changes in climate that can affect populations or drive mass migrations include changes to sea level, regional patterns of temperature and precipitation, and the types of crops and livestock that can be raised.
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