Friday, September 25, 2009

Vocabulary for Poppy

patience
refusal
gloomiest
responsibility
memories
experiences
humiliate
exhausted
appointment
frightened

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Unit Challenge Words Unit 1-10

Unit 4

scout
broil
trout
ointment
outfit

Unit 5

stew
mushroom
scoop
toadstool
kangaroo

Saturday, September 5, 2009

Skeleton

See the diagram of the skeleton to find extra words.

Simple Machines

Click here for Simple Machines words.

Native Americans

Click here to find Native American words!

Solar System

Click here to find words for the Solar System!

Rocks and Minerals

Anthracite: A dense shiny coal that has a high carbon content;
Asbestos: An incombustible, chemical-resistant, fibrous mineral used for fire-proofing;
Basalt: A hard, dense, dark volcanic rock;
Conglomerate: A rock consisting of pebbles and gravel cemented together;
Copper: A reddish brown element used to make coins, water pipes and electrical wires;
Crust: The exterior layer of the earth;
Crystal: A mineral form created when the atoms inside a mineral are arranged into some sort
of regular pattern;
often results in geometric shapes and shiny flat surfaces on the mineral;
Earthquake: A sudden movement of the earth's crust usually caused by the release of
pressure due to volcanic activity, or accumulated along geologic faults;
Erosion: The process of wearing away land by physical and chemical influences, such as
wind, water, and temperature changes;
Fault: A crack in the surface of the earth;
Feldspars: A group of abundant rock-forming minerals consisting mainly of silicates of
aluminum with varying amounts of potassium, calcium and sodium;
Fold: Bending of rock layers to show a hump or a dip;
Fossil: A remnant or trace of an organism of a past geologic age, such as a skeleton or leaf
imprint, embedded in the earth's crust;
Geode: A hollow, usually sphere-like rock with crystals lining the inside wall;
Geologist: A scientist who specializes in the study of geology;
Geology: The science of the origin, history, and structure of the earth;
Glacier: A huge mass of ice slowly flowing over a land mass, formed from compacted snow;
Gneiss: A banded, granite-like metamorphic rock;
Gold: A yellow element that is quite rare - used in coins and precious objects;
Granite: A common, coarse-grained, hard igneous rock consisting chiefly of quartz , feldspar
and mica;
Ice ages: Periods of the earth's history during which large parts of the Earth's surface were
covered by glaciers several kilometers thick;
Ice field: Large expanse of frozen water at the base of a glacier;
Igneous rocks: Rocks formed from melted rock;
Iron: A soft metallic element often mixed with other elements to form materials of great
hardness and strength, such as steel;
Lava: Molten rock when it is ejected from the earth's crust;
Lead: A dense grayish element used in batteries and weights;
Magma: Molten rock beneath the earth's crust;
Marble: A streaked metamorphic rock formed when limestone or dolomite is subjected to high
temperatures and pressures, used especially in architecture and sculpture;
Limestone: A common sedimentary rock consisting mostly of calcium carbonate;
Luster: The brilliance or radiance of a rock or mineral sample;
Metamorphic rocks: Rocks that are formed when rocks are subjected to heat and pressure;
Mica: A mineral that is common in igneous and metamorphic rocks;
It forms crystals that can be split into very thin flat layers.
Mineral: A natural inorganic substance having a definite chemical composition;
Mohs scale: A scale used to describe the hardness of a mineral, ranging from 1 for the softest
to 10 for the hardest;
Moraine: An accumulation of boulders, stones, or other debris carried and deposited by a
glacier;
Nickel: A silver-colored element used in coinage and plating of objects;
Paleontologist: A scientist who studies the forms of life existing in prehistoric or geologic
times;
Pumice: A light porous lava;
Quartz: A hard mineral composed of silicon and oxygen;
Rock: A naturally formed combination of mineral matter that makes up the Earth's crust;
Sandstone: A sedimentary rock formed by the compaction of sand with a natural cement, such
as silica;
Sediment: Material that settles to the bottom of a liquid;
Shale: A rock composed of layers of clay-like, fine-grained sediments;
Sedimentary rocks: Rocks formed from deposits of sediment;
Slate: A fine-grained metamorphic rock formed when shale is subjected to low temperatures
and pressures;
Splits into thin, smooth-surfaced layers;
Soil: The top layer of the earth's surface, suitable for the growth of plant life;
Streak test: A test in which a mineral sample is rubbed across a ceramic plate to determine
what color of markings are made;
Striations: Thin lines or scratches on the surface of a rock;
Soapstone: A soft metamorphic rock composed mostly of talc, and often used for carving;
Uranium: A heavy silvery-white metallic element, radioactive and toxic;
Volcanic crater: A bowl-shaped depression at the mouth of a volcano;
Weathering: Any of the chemical or mechanical processes by which rocks exposed to the
weather break down;
Zinc: A bluish-white, lustrous metallic element used to make several alloys;