River Boxes
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Age/Grade Appropriate
Grades 1 - 3
Objectives:
Show how flowing water erodes the landscape
Location
Classroom and outside
Background
Students often know that rivers and streams can be muddy, especially newly formed ones. But they may not know that some of the clay, sand, and sediment that makes the river muddy comes from the riverbed itself, and is a result of the river eroding or cutting through the riverbed. This activity will help students understand the erosion process and its part in the formation of rivers and streams
The rock formations of Badlands National Park result directly from the influence of rivers on the landscape. Millions of years ago, rivers from the Black Hills carried sediments that formed the Badlands layers. In more recent times, rivers have been eroding the Badlands rock resulting in the buttes you see today.
Materials
Each group of two or more students will need:
A 1. 9-L milk carton
A 2-L bottle
An outdoor source of soil (sandy is best)
A graduated cylinder or metric beaker
A metric ruler
Scissors
A water supply
A garden trowel
Vocabulary
Erosion
Deposition
River bed
Water flow
Method
Simulation, demonstration and discovery
Procedure
Extension
Students might draw pictures of rivers and plains with features carved by rivers.
Teacher might take student on a walk-about to see examples of erosion.
In a local stream bed or flood plain, note rocks that do not occur in the local area that must have been "robbed" from the land further upstream.
The lesson might begin a longer lesson on the environment in which the question of how plants slow erosion is considered.
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