Year 8 Science Study Guide PDF

Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...

Summary

This study guide covers the basics of body systems, including cells, tissues, organs, and organ systems, for Year 8 science students. It details fundamental concepts about how cells are organized and work together to keep organisms alive.

Full Transcript

‭Year 8 Science‬ ‭s >/ Study guide‬ ‭BODY SYSTEMS‬ ‭ ells To Organ Systems‬ C ‭Cells‬‭are the smallest unit of living things.‬ ‭Tissues‬‭are made of‬ t‭ he same types of cell...

‭Year 8 Science‬ ‭s >/ Study guide‬ ‭BODY SYSTEMS‬ ‭ ells To Organ Systems‬ C ‭Cells‬‭are the smallest unit of living things.‬ ‭Tissues‬‭are made of‬ t‭ he same types of cells. Muscle tissue is made of muscle cells.‬ ‭Organs‬‭are made of‬ ‭different types of tissues. The stomach is an organ made of glandular tissue that‬ ‭produces chemicals to digest the food, muscle tissue to churn the food and connective‬ ‭tissue to hold the other tissues together.‬ ‭Organ systems‬‭are made of different types of organs.‬‭The digestive system is made of‬ ‭several organs including the mouth, oesophagus, stomach and intestine.‬ ‭ ulticellular organisms contain many cells that are specialised for particular roles. They are‬ M ‭organised together in organs and systems which all work together to keep the organism‬ ‭alive.‬ ‭ igestive System‬ D ‭The digestive system digests food for the body. It is made of several parts.‬ ∙‭ ‬‭Mouth‬‭– chews, moistens and swallows the food.‬ ‭∙‬‭Oesophagus‬‭– transfers the food from the mouth to‬‭the stomach‬ ‭∙‬‭Stomach‬‭– digestion of the food continues here‬ ‭∙‬‭Small Intestine‬‭– digestion of the food finishes‬‭and then the digested food is absorbed‬ ‭into the bloodstream to be taken to al parts of the body‬ ‭∙‬‭Large Intestine‬‭– excess water is reabsorbed into‬‭bloodstream and undigested food is‬ ‭formed into faeces‬ ‭∙‬‭Rectum‬‭– the faeces are stored here until they are‬‭removed through the anus.‬‭2‬ ‭ĂŶŬƐƚŽǁŶ 'ŝƌůƐ ,ŝŐŚ ^ĐŚŽŽů‬ ‭ irculatory System‬ C ‭The circulatory system transports blood around the body. It is made of several parts.‬ ‭∙‬ ‭Heart‬‭– pumps blood out into the blood vessels. It‬‭has four chambers – the left atrium, left‬ ‭ventricle, right atrium and right ventricle. The diagram below shows the four chambers‬ ‭and the direction of blood flow through them.‬ ‭∙‬‭Blood vessels‬‭– carry blood to all parts of the‬‭body and then back to the heart.‬‭Arteries‬ ‭carry blood away from the heart. They have thick, muscular walls because blood flows‬ ‭through them under pressure.‬ ∙‭ ‬ ‭Veins‬ ‭carry‬ ‭blood‬‭back‬‭to‬‭the‬‭heart.‬‭They‬‭have‬‭thinner‬‭walls‬‭than‬‭arteries‬‭because‬‭the‬ ‭blood‬‭is‬‭flowing‬‭through‬‭them‬‭without‬‭pressure‬‭but‬‭they‬‭have‬‭valves‬‭to‬‭stop‬‭the‬‭blood‬ ‭flowing backwards.‬ ‭∙‬‭Capillaries‬‭connect arteries to veins. They deliver‬‭food and oxygen to cells and take‬ ‭away carbon dioxide and other wastes. Their walls are one cell thick so that materials‬ ‭can pass between them and the cells. Blood travels to the lungs to drop off carbon‬ ‭dioxide and pick up oxygen. It then travels to all parts of the body to deliver the oxygen‬ ‭and collect carbon dioxide.‬ ∙‭ ‬‭Blood‬‭– is made of red blood cells that carry oxygen,‬‭white blood cells that fight‬ ‭infection and platelets that help blood to clot.‬ ‭3‬ ‭4‬ T‭ he Respiratory System‬ ‭The respiratory system delivers oxygen to the blood and collects carbon dioxide from it. It is‬ ‭made of several parts.‬ ∙‭ ‬‭Trachea‬‭– also called the windpipe, takes in air‬‭from the mouth and nose.‬ ‭∙‬‭Bronchi‬‭–‬ ‭the trachea branches into two tubes called the bronchi that enter the lungs. There they‬ ‭branch into smaller and smaller tubes.‬ ‭∙‬‭Alveoli‬‭– also called the air sacs, are at the end‬‭of the small tubes. They are surrounded‬ ‭ y capillaries. Oxygen passes from the alveoli into the blood in the capillaries and‬ b ‭carbon dioxide passes from the blood in the capillaries into the alveoli.‬ T‭ he Excretory System‬ ‭The excretory system removes wastes from the body. Excretion is carried out by the‬ ∙‭ ‬‭Lungs‬‭– which remove carbon dioxide and water vapour‬‭when we breathe out‬ ∙‭ ‬ ‭Skin‬‭– which removes salts and water in sweat‬ ∙‭ ‬‭Kidney system‬‭– which removes urine; It is made‬‭of several parts.‬ ∙‭ ‬‭Kidneys‬‭– filter urea and excess salts from the‬‭blood and mix them with water to form‬ ‭urine.‬ ∙‭ ‬‭Ureters‬‭– are two tubes take the urine from the‬‭kidneys to the bladder.‬ ∙‭ ‬‭Bladder‬‭– stores urine until it is removed.‬ ‭∙‬‭Urethra‬‭– is a tube that removes urine from the‬‭bladder‬ ‭5‬ T‭ he Skeletal System‬ ‭The skeletal system is composed of 206‬‭bones‬‭. It has‬‭several roles in the body.‬ ∙‭ ‬‭It allows the body to stand upright and support‬‭its weight‬ ∙‭ ‬‭It protects vital organs such as the heart and lungs‬ ∙‭ ‬‭It allows movement‬ ∙‭ ‬‭It makes red and white blood cells‬ ‭The skeletal system also contains‬ ∙‭ ‬‭Ligaments‬‭– which join bones together‬ ‭∙‬‭Cartilage‬‭– which prevents bones from grinding against‬‭each other‬ ‭∙‬‭Tendons‬‭– which join muscles to bones‬ ‭∙‬‭Muscles‬‭– which move the bones‬ ‭6‬ ‭ lossary‬ G ‭specialised‬‭cell,‬‭tissue,‬‭organ,‬‭digestive,‬‭oesophagus,‬‭intestine,‬‭circulatory,‬‭artery,‬‭vein,‬ ‭capillary,‬ ‭respiratory,‬ ‭trachea,‬ ‭bronchi,‬ ‭alveoli,‬ ‭excretory,‬‭urea,‬‭kidney,‬‭ureter,‬‭bladder,‬ ‭urethra, skeleton‬ S‭ tudy Questions‬ ‭1. Explain why multicellular organisms require specialised organs and systems. 2.‬ ‭Describe the role of these organs in the digestive system:‬ ‭i) Mouth‬ ‭ii) Oesophagus‬ ‭iii) Stomach‬ ‭iv) Small intestine‬ ‭v) Large intestine‬ v‭ i) Rectum‬ ‭vii) Anus‬ ‭3. Draw a simple labelled diagram of the heart showing the four chambers, the valves,‬ ‭arteries and veins and use arrows to show the direction that blood flows through it. 4.‬ ‭Describe the structure and function of arteries, veins and capillaries 5. What is blood made‬ ‭of? What does each part do?‬ ‭6. Describe the role of these parts of the respiratory system:‬ ‭i) trachea‬ ‭ii) bronchi‬ ‭iii) the alveoli in the lungs‬ ‭7. Which gas does the blood‬ ‭a) pick up at the lungs ?‬ ‭b) take back to the lungs?‬ ‭8. Name the excretory organs of the body.‬ ‭9. Describe the role of these parts of the excretory system:‬ ‭i) Kidneys‬ ‭ii) Ureters‬ ‭iii) Bladder‬ ‭iv) Urethra‬ ‭10. Draw a labelled diagram showing the arrangement of the kidneys, ureters, bladder‬ ‭and urethra.‬ ‭11. Describe the roles of the skeleton, ligaments, cartilage, tendon and muscles.‬‭7‬ ‭Elements and Compounds‬ E‭ lements‬ ‭All‬‭matter‬‭is‬‭composed‬‭of‬‭elements.‬‭There‬‭are‬‭more‬‭than‬‭110‬‭known‬‭different‬‭types‬‭of‬ ‭elements‬‭and‬‭their‬‭names‬‭are‬‭shown‬‭in‬‭the‬‭Periodic‬‭Table.‬‭Elements‬‭cannot‬‭be‬‭broken‬ ‭down into simpler substances.‬ ‭ etals And Non-Metals‬ M ‭There are two main groups of elements – metals and non-metals – and they have specific‬ ‭properties.‬ ‭ etals‬ M ∙‭ ‬‭have a shiny, metallic lustre‬ ‭∙‬‭have high melting point and boiling point‬ ∙‭ ‬‭are solids at room temperature, except mercury which‬‭is a liquid‬ ∙‭ ‬‭conduct heat and electricity‬ ‭∙‬‭are malleable, which means that they can be easily‬‭bent and formed into thin sheets‬ ‭Examples of metals‬ ‭(Gold) (Mercury) (Copper)‬ ‭8‬ ‭ on-metals‬ N ∙‭ ‬‭have a dull lustre‬ ∙‭ ‬‭have either low melting point and boiling point‬‭or very high melting point and boiling‬ ‭point‬ ∙‭ ‬‭do not conduct heat and electricity, except for‬‭carbon‬ ∙‭ ‬‭are brittle, which means that they break easily‬ ‭Examples of non – metals‬ ‭(Carbon) (Neon)‬ ‭(Sulfur)‬ ‭ ompounds‬ C ‭A compound is made of two or more different elements joined together Compounds have‬ ‭properties that are different to the elements that they are made of. The names of the‬ e‭ lements come from the elements that are in them. For example, the elements called‬ ‭sodium and chlorine make the compound called sodium chloride.‬ ‭There many different compounds on Earth with many different uses.‬ ∙‭ ‬‭sodium chloride is table salt‬ ∙‭ ‬‭water is essential for the survival of all living‬‭things‬ ∙‭ ‬‭methane is found in natural gas and is used for‬‭cooking‬ ∙‭ ‬‭sucrose, also called sugar, is used in cooking‬ ‭∙‬‭octane is found in petrol and is used as a fuel‬‭in cars‬ ‭9‬ ‭ ompounds And Mixtures‬ C ‭A‬‭compound‬‭contains elements joined together. The‬‭amount of each element in the‬ ‭compound is always the same. For example, water is always H‬‭2‭O ‬ and carbon dioxide is‬ ‭always CO‬‭2‭.‬ ‬ ‭A‬‭mixture‬‭contains elements and/or compounds mixed‬‭together but not joined together.‬ ‭The amounts of each substance in the mixture are not always the same. Air is a mixture of‬ ‭gases and sea water is a mixture of water and dissolved salts.‬ ‭ hemical Reactions‬ C ‭A chemical reaction occurs when elements and/or compounds join together to form‬ ‭different elements and/or compounds. There are several observable signs that a chemical‬ ‭reaction has occurred.‬ ‭∙‬‭the temperature of the mixture increases or decreases‬ ‭∙‬‭a gas is produced‬ ‭∙‬‭a colour change occurs‬ ‭∙‬‭a solid is formed‬ ‭10‬ ‭Glossary‬ ‭element, melting point, boiling point, density, compound, chemical reaction, temperature‬ S‭ tudy Questions‬ ‭1. What is an element?‬ ‭2. Complete this table for the properties of metals and non-metals.‬ ‭Property‬ ‭Metals‬ ‭Non-metals‬ ‭Lustre‬ ‭Heat conduction‬ ‭Electricity conduction‬ ‭Malleability‬ ‭3. What are the chemical symbols for‬ ‭a) hydrogen c) oxygen‬ ‭b) magnesium d) zinc‬ ‭4. What is a compound?‬ ‭5. Name the compounds formed from these elements.‬ ‭a) silver + chlorine c) lead + oxygen‬ ‭b) tin + sulphur d) magnesium + iodine‬ ‭6. Name the elements contained in these compounds.‬ ‭a) magnesium oxide c) zinc chloride‬ ‭b) aluminium sulphide d) nickel iodide‬ ‭7. Name two common compounds and describe one use for each one. 8. Identify‬ ‭three changes that commonly take place during a chemical reaction. 9. What is an‬ ‭ore?‬ ‭10. Explain how froth flotation is used to separate ores from rocks.‬ ‭11. Identify two ways that metals are separated from ores and give an example for each‬ ‭one.‬ ‭11‬ ‭Energy‬ T‭ ypes Of Energy‬ ‭There are several types of energy found around us.‬ ∙‭ ‬‭Potential energy – is stored energy to be used later.‬‭It is found in a stretched elastic‬ ‭band, a wound up spring and an object raised above the ground.‬ ∙‭ ‬‭Kinetic energy – is found in moving objects.‬ ∙‭ ‬‭Light energy – is produced by the sun, artificial‬‭lights, burning chemicals and very hot‬ ‭objects.‬ ∙‭ ‬‭Heat energy – is found in hot objects such as room‬‭heaters.‬ ∙‭ ‬‭Sound energy – is produced by vibrating objects‬‭such as musical instruments.‬ ‭∙‬ ‭Electrical energy – is changed by electrical appliances into other types of energy.‬ ‭(Light‬ ‭energy) (Kinetic and Potential energy)‬ E‭ NERGY CHANGES‬ ‭Energy can change from one type to another. Electrical appliances change electrical energy‬ ‭into different types of energy. For example,‬ ∙‭ ‬‭a toaster changes electrical energy into heat energy‬‭to toast the bread‬ ‭∙‬‭an iPod‬ ‭changes electrical energy into sound energy so that you can listen to music‬ ‭∙‬‭a fan‬ ‭changes electrical energy into kinetic energy so that you can keep cool‬ ‭12‬ L‭ aw Of Conservation Of Energy‬ ‭The Law of Conservation of Energy states that energy cannot be created or destroyed. It can‬ ‭only be changed from one type to another.‬ F‭ ossil Fuels‬ ‭Coal and petroleum are called fossil fuels because they are formed from the remains of‬ ‭ancient living things. They take millions of years to form and are non-renewable, which‬ ‭means that once they are used they cannot be replaced. They are used as fuel in vehicles.‬ ‭They are also used as fuels in power stations to generate electricity.‬ S‭ olar Energy‬ ‭Solar energy comes form the sun. It is renewable which means that as it is used it can be‬ ‭replaced because it is continually being supplied to Earth by the sun. It is used in solar cells‬ ‭to produce electricity and in solar water heaters to heat water.‬ ‭13‬ ‭ onduction Of Heat‬ C ‭Heat travels through solids by conduction. At the point where the object is heated, its‬ ‭particles gain energy and vibrate faster, which causes them to collide with the particles next‬ ‭to them and pass on their energy. When the neighbouring particles receive the energy, it‬ ‭makes them also vibrate faster and pass the energy on to more particles. In this way, heat‬ ‭travels through the solid.‬ ‭Metals are conductors of heat. This means that heat energy can travel though them from‬ ‭one place to another. For example, saucepans are made with a metal base to conduct heat‬ ‭from the stove into the food.‬ ‭Plastics are insulators of heat. This means that heat energy cannot travel through them. For‬ ‭example, the handle of a saucepan is made of plastic because it will not conduct heat and so‬ ‭you can pick up the saucepan without burning your hand.‬ ‭ onvection Of Heat‬ C ‭When liquids and gases are heated, the heat travels in a circular motion called a convection‬ ‭current. The diagram below shows how convection currents warm a room.‬ ‭14‬ ‭ adiation Of Heat‬ R ‭Radiation is the transfer of heat energy by waves called infrared radiation. It does not need‬ ‭a medium to travel through and so can travel through a vacuum. Heat travels by radiation‬ ‭from the sun to earth and it travels the same way outwards from a fire.‬ ‭Light coloured surfaces reflect more heat while dark coloured surfaces absorb more heat.‬ ‭This is why light coloured clothes and cars are cooler in summer than dark coloured ones.‬ ‭The absorbing panels of solar water heaters are painted black so that the copper water‬ ‭pipes inside them absorb heat from the sun to heat the water.‬ ‭15‬ ‭Glossary‬ k‭ inetic, potential, fossil fuels, solar energy, renewable, electric current, conduction,‬ ‭convection, radiation‬ S‭ tudy Questions‬ ‭1. Define these types of energy and identify objects or situations in which these types of‬ ‭energy exist:‬ ‭a) potential energy‬ ‭b) kinetic energy‬ ‭c) light energy‬ ‭d) heat energy‬ ‭e) sound energy‬ ‭f) electrical energy‬ ‭2. Energy can change from one type into another. What energy changes occur in these‬ ‭electrical appliances:‬ ‭a) heater‬ ‭b) CD player‬ ‭c) stove‬ ‭d) light globe‬ ‭e) battery operated toy car‬ ‭f) TV‬ ‭3. What does the Law of Conservation of Energy state?‬ ‭4. Coal and petroleum are non-renewable fossil fuels.‬ ‭a) What does ‘non-renewable’ mean?‬ ‭b) What does ‘fossil fuels’ mean?‬ ‭5. What are coal and petroleum used for?‬ ‭6. Solar energy is renewable. What does ’renewable’ mean?‬ ‭9. What is solar energy used for?‬ ‭8. Describe some situations in which heat is transferred by conduction. 9.‬ ‭Metals are heat conductors. What does this mean?‬ ‭10. Plastics are heat insulators. What does this mean?‬ ‭11. Describe some situations in which heat is transferred by convection. 12.‬ ‭Describe some situations in which heat is transferred by radiation.‬ ‭16‬ ‭Force and Electricity‬ F‭ orces‬ ‭A‬‭force‬‭is something that changes motion. This means‬‭that a force can get something to‬ ‭∙‬‭stop‬ ‭∙‬‭go faster‬ ∙‭ ‬‭go slower‬ ∙‭ ‬‭change direction‬ ‭∙‬‭change shape‬ ‭ force can be a push, a pull or a twist.‬ A ‭Contact‬‭forces touch the object they are acting on.‬‭Some contact forces are friction, air‬ ‭resistance and buoyancy.‬ ‭Non-contact‬‭forces do not touch the object. Some non-contact‬‭forces are gravity, magnetic‬ ‭forces and electric forces.‬ ‭Force is measured on a spring balance in units called Newtons (N).‬ F‭ RICTION‬ ‭Friction is a force between two rolling or sliding objects. It is caused by the roughness of‬ ‭surfaces and it acts to slow the objects down. Friction always acts in the opposite direction‬ ‭to the object’s movement. Rough surfaces have more friction than smooth surfaces.‬ ‭Friction causes surfaces to wear away. Rubber wheels on skateboards and bikes become‬ ‭thinner as they rub against the road.‬ ‭Friction also produces heat. A car engine becomes hot as the pistons move up and down in‬ ‭the cylinders.‬ ‭17‬ E‭ lectrostatic Forces‬ ‭Electrostatic forces occur on objects that have become electrically charged after being‬ ‭rubbed. Some objects become positively charged and others become negatively charged.‬ ‭When electrostatically charged objects are brought near to each other‬ ∙‭ ‬‭two positively charged objects will repel each other‬ ∙‭ ‬‭two negatively charged objects will repel each other‬ ‭∙‬‭a positively charged object and a negatively charged object will attract each other‬ E‭ lectrostatic forces can be useful. They are used‬ ∙‭ ‬‭to produce images in photocopiers‬ ∙‭ ‬‭in paint spray guns to make paint stick to surfaces‬ ∙‭ ‬‭to remove solid particles from smoke in chimneys‬ ‭Electrostatic forces can be a nuisance. They‬ ∙‭ ‬‭cause lightning‬ ∙‭ ‬‭cause electric shocks when we touch door handles‬‭and cars‬ ∙‭ ‬‭cause sparks that lead to explosions‬ ‭An‬‭electric field‬‭is the area around an electric charge.‬ ‭18‬ ‭ agnetic Forces‬ M ‭Magnetic forces are produced by magnets. These forces attract metals containing iron,‬ ‭steel, nickel and cobalt.‬ ‭The ends of a magnet are called‬‭poles‬‭– the north‬‭pole and the south pole. When two‬ ‭unlike‬‭(different) poles – north and south – are brought‬‭together, they‬‭attract‬‭each‬ ‭other.‬ ‭When two‬‭like‬‭(same) poles – north and north‬‭or‬‭south‬‭and south – are brought together,‬ ‭they‬‭repel‬‭each other.‬ ‭A‬‭magnetic field‬‭is the‬‭area around a magnet‬ ‭ agnets are used‬ M ∙‭ ‬‭to keep refrigerator doors closed‬ ∙‭ ‬‭to hold notes on the refrigerator door‬ ∙‭ ‬‭in speakers‬ ‭19‬ E‭ lectric Current‬ ‭An electric current is the movement of electric charges through a metal wire. The charges‬ ‭carry electrical energy to appliances that then change the energy into other types of energy.‬ ‭The diagram below shows a simple electric circuit containing a power supply, a lamp and‬ ‭electrical wires.‬ E‭ lectromagnets‬ ‭An‬‭electromagnet‬‭contains an iron core surrounded‬‭by electric wires. It is a temporary‬ ‭magnet because the iron core is magnetic only when electricity runs through the wires.‬ ‭Electromagnets are used‬ ‭∙‬‭in scrap-yard cranes to lift cars‬ ∙‭ ‬‭in hospitals to remove a piece of steel from a patient’s‬‭eye‬ ∙‭ ‬‭in the mouthpiece of a telephone‬ ‭∙‬‭in metal detectors at airports‬ ‭20‬ ‭Glossary‬ ‭force, spring balance, Newton, friction, electrostatic, field, magnetic, pole, electromagnet‬ S‭ tudy Questions‬ ‭1. Describe one example of a force that is changing‬ ‭a) shape‬ ‭b) direction‬ ‭c) speed‬ ‭2. Which instrument is used to measure force in Newtons?‬ ‭. What is friction?‬ 3 ‭4. Describe two examples of friction occurring in everyday situations. 5.‬ ‭What must you do to an object to give it an electrostatic charge?‬ ‭6. What happens when the following types of electrostatic charges are brought‬ ‭together?‬ ‭a) two positive charges‬ ‭b) two negative charges‬ ‭c) one positive charge and one negative charge‬ ‭7. Identify two everyday situations in which electrostatic forces are‬ ‭a) useful‬ ‭b) a nuisance‬ ‭8. What is the meaning of the term “magnetic substance”?‬ ‭9. Name two magnetic substances.‬ ‭10. What happens when the following types of magnetic poles are brought together a)‬ ‭two north poles‬ ‭b) two south poles‬ ‭c) one north pole and one south pole‬ ‭11. Identify two everyday situations in which magnets are used.‬ ‭12. What do electric charges do in an electric circuit?‬ ‭13. Identify some common electrical appliances and the energy changes that occur in‬ ‭them.‬ ‭14. Identify two everyday situations in which electromagnets are used‬‭21‬ ‭Investigating Scientifically‬ ‭Laboratory Equipment‬ ‭Equipment‬ ‭2D diagram‬ ‭Beaker‬ ‭Measuring Cylinder‬ ‭Conical Flask‬ ‭Test Tube‬ ‭Tripod and wire gauze‬ ‭Bunsen Burner‬ ‭22‬ ‭C. Spirou (LMC)‬ ‭Retort stand with‬ ‭clamp‬ ‭x‬ ‭Filter funnel‬ ‭Test tube rack with‬ ‭test tubes‬ ‭Test tube holder‬ ‭Evaporating dish‬ ‭Crucible with lid‬ ‭23‬ ‭Bunsen Burner‬ ‭ Bunsen burner has two flames.‬ A ∙‭ ‬‭Yellow flame is the safety flame because it is easily‬‭seen when the Bunsen burner is not‬ ‭being used.‬ ‭∙‬‭Blue flame is the heating flame because it is hotter‬‭than the yellow flame and it does not‬ ‭leave black soot on the glassware‬‭.‬ ‭ ypothesis‬ H ‭A hypothesis (pl. hypotheses) is an intelligent guess or probable answer to a question. It is‬ ‭based on previous experience, information gained from other sources and the results of‬ ‭other experiments. A scientist plans and conducts an experiment to test a hypothesis. For‬ ‭this reason, a hypothesis is written as a statement that can be proved or disproved by‬ ‭experiment. Some hypotheses are:‬ ∙‭ ‬‭Watering plants with soapy water stunts their growth‬ ∙‭ ‬‭Tall students jump higher in high jump competitions‬‭than short students.‬ ‭24‬ ‭Planning And Conducting A Valid, Reliable Experiment‬ ‭ variable is a factor in an experiment that can change, eg, temperature, light. A‬‭valid‬ A ‭experiment tests the independent variable and keeps all other variables constant /the‬ ‭same.‬ ‭In a valid experiment …‬ ∙‭ ‬‭one variable is changed during the experiment. It‬‭is called the‬‭independent variable.‬‭∙‬ ‭one variable is measured or observed as it responds to the independent variable. It is‬ ‭called the‬‭dependent variable.‬ ∙‭ ‬‭all other variables are kept constant/the same.‬ ‭The aim of the experiment is to investigate the effect of the independent variable on the‬ ‭dependent variable.‬ ‭ ‬‭control‬‭is the part of an experiment that is designed‬‭to show that the independent‬ A ‭variable being tested is responsible for the results observed. It is used as a standard against‬ ‭which the results from the experiment can be compared and judged. It ensures that that the‬ ‭results are due to the independent variable and nothing else. The control has everything the‬ ‭same except that the independent variable is not included. For example, when testing the‬ ‭effect of a fertiliser on plant growth, the control will have the same type of plants growing‬ ‭under exactly the same conditions but without fertiliser. Note that in some experiments a‬ ‭control is not possible.‬ ‭ ‬‭reliable‬‭experiment repeats the method numerous‬‭times to minimise errors and‬ A ‭inaccuracies.‬ ‭Planning A Method‬ ‭ hen you are planning an experiment, ask yourself these questions:-‬ W ‭1. Which variable will I make different?‬ ‭2. Which variables must I keep the same?‬ ‭3. What will I measure or observe? What measuring instrument will I use?‬ ‭4. What safety precautions must I take?‬ ‭5. How will I record the results?‬ ‭6. How many times will I repeat the experiment?‬ ‭7. How will I analyse the results? Will I calculate averages? Will I draw a graph?‬ ‭25‬ ‭ riting A Method‬ W ‭To write a method for an experiment, number each step and use this format:-‬ ‭VERB NOUN CONDITION (when, where, how, how long?)‬ ‭ simple way to write a method is to‬ A ‭a) write the steps for ONE form of the independent variable‬ ‭b) write the phrase “Repeat steps 1-?” for the other forms of the independent variable‬ F‭ or example…‬ ‭1. Put 500g of sandy soil into a pot.‬ ‭2. Plant 20 seedlings in the pot.‬ ‭3. Place the pot in constant light.‬ ‭4. Add 100ml of water to the pot every day.‬ ‭5. Measure the height of the seedlings with a ruler every day for 10 days.‬ ‭6. Record results.‬ ‭7. Repeat steps 1-6 four times.‬ ‭8. Repeat steps 1-7 in 12 hours of light and 12 hours of darkness.‬ ‭9.‬‭Repeat steps 1-7 in constant darkness.‬ ‭ bservations‬ O ‭Scientists collect information from experiments by making observations using their senses‬ ‭and measuring instruments. There are two types of observations.‬ ‭ )‬‭Qualitative observations‬‭– are descriptions in‬‭words, eg, the colour of a chemical. We use‬ 1 ‭our senses to make these observations. However the senses are limited and can be‬ ‭unreliable.‬ ‭ )‬‭Quantitative observations‬‭– are measurements involving‬‭numbers, eg, the temperature‬ 2 ‭of a liquid. We use measuring instruments to make these observations. Measuring‬ ‭instruments increase our powers of observation. Where possible, scientists make‬ ‭quantitative observations because they are more accurate.‬ ∙‭ ‬‭a thermometer is used to measure temperature‬ ∙‭ ‬‭a stopwatch is used to measure time‬ ∙‭ ‬‭a balance is used to measure mass‬ ∙‭ ‬‭a measuring cylinder is used to measure volume‬ ‭26‬ T‭ ables‬ ‭Data is presented in tables because this makes the data easy to understand, easy to see‬ ‭relationships and easy to make comparisons.‬ L‭ ine Graphs‬ ‭A line graph is used to show a relationship between two variables that are measured. To‬ ‭draw a line graph:‬ ‭1. draw the axes.‬ ‭2. label each axis with the name of the variable and a unit of measurement eg, mass (g).‬ ‭3. choose a suitable scale for each axis. Mark numbers at regular intervals along the axis.‬ ‭4. plot each point with a cross.‬ ‭5. join crosses with a ruled line or a freehand line.‬ ‭Graphs can be used to extract information, make calculations, show trends, make‬ ‭comparisons, recognise patterns, make conclusions and predictions.‬ ‭ onclusions‬ C ‭Making a conclusion from an experiment involves comparing experimental results with‬ ‭those predicted from the hypothesis. If the experimental results agree with the predicted‬ ‭results then the conclusion is that the hypothesis is supported. If the experimental results‬ ‭disagree with the predicted results then the conclusion is that the hypothesis is rejected.‬ ‭Glossary‬ ‭laboratory, Bunsen burner, test tube, beaker, tripod, gauze, measuring instrument,‬ ‭thermometer, stopwatch, balance, measuring cylinder, hypothesis, valid experiment,‬ ‭reliable experiment, independent variable, controlled variable, dependent variable,‬ ‭qualitative observation, quantitative observation, procedure, table, graph, conclusion‬ ‭27‬ S‭ tudy Questions‬ ‭1. What must you do to a Bunsen burner to get the‬ ‭a) yellow flame?‬ ‭b) blue flame?‬ ‭2. Why is the yellow flame called the safety flame?‬ ‭3. When do you use the safety flame?‬ ‭4. Why is the blue flame on the Bunsen burner used for heating?‬ ‭5. What is the difference between qualitative and quantitative observations? 6.‬ ‭Which measuring instrument would you use to measure‬ ‭a) time?‬ ‭b) temperature?‬ ‭c) volume of a liquid?‬ ‭7. Identify the three types of variables in a valid, reliable experiment. 8.‬ ‭What is a control? Describe one example.‬ ‭9. What must be done to make an experiment‬ ‭a) valid?‬ ‭b) reliable?‬ ‭10. Explain how to write a procedure.‬ ‭11. Using examples, explain the difference between a qualitative and a quantitative‬ ‭observation.‬ ‭12. Which type of observation is more accurate – a qualitative observation and a‬ ‭quantitative observation?‬ ‭13. State two reasons why data is presented in tables.‬ ‭14. What is a line graph used for?‬ ‭15. How are crosses joined on a line graph?‬ ‭16. State two reasons why data is presented in line graphs.‬ ‭17. Explain how to make a conclusion from an experiment.‬ ‭28‬ ‭Living Things‬ ‭ ells‬ C ‭All living things are made of cells. The parts of a cell are‬ ∙‭ ‬‭nucleus – controls everything that happens inside‬‭the cell‬ ‭∙‬‭cell membrane – protects the cell and gives it its‬‭shape. It has tiny holes that allow‬ ‭materials to enter and leave the cell‬ ∙‭ ‬‭cytoplasm – a jelly-like substance that fills the‬‭cell. Most cell functions occur here.‬ ‭∙‬‭cell‬ ‭wall – in plant cells only. It is located on the outside of the cell membrane gives the plant‬ ‭its shape and stiffness‬ ‭∙‬‭chloroplasts – in plant cells only. They contain chlorophyll for making food for the plant.‬ ‭(Animal Cell) (Plant Cell)‬ ‭ nicellular And Multicellular Organisms‬ U ‭A‬‭unicellular‬‭organism is made of one cell only. Bacteria‬‭are unicellular organisms.‬ ‭Unicellular organisms reproduce by cell division. This means that their cells divide in half to‬ ‭produce two new cells.‬ ‭Bacteria can be either helpful of harmful.‬ ‭Helpful bacteria‬‭are used to‬ ∙‭ ‬‭break down human faeces in sewage‬ ‭∙‬‭treat industrial waste‬ ∙‭ ‬‭decompose dead plants and animals‬ ∙‭ ‬‭make yoghurt and cheese‬ ∙‭ ‬‭produce drugs for treating diseases‬ ‭Harmful bacteria‬‭cause diseases.‬ ‭29‬ ‭(Bacteria)‬ ‭A‬‭multicellular‬‭organism is made of more than one‬‭cell. Most organisms are multicellular.‬ ‭ lassification Keys‬ C ‭Scientists use classification keys to identify unknown objects and organisms. The most‬ ‭common type of key is the dichotomous key which has two choices at every point. It starts‬ ‭at the top with one group and slowly subdivides until no more choices are possible.‬ ‭30‬ ‭ ertebrate Groups‬ V ‭Vertebrates‬‭are animals with backbones. There are‬‭five groups of vertebrates.‬ ‭ )‬‭Mammals‬ 1 ∙‭ ‬‭are endothermic (warm-blooded)‬ ∙‭ ‬‭have hair or fur over their skin‬ ∙‭ ‬‭have lungs for breathing‬ ∙‭ ‬‭feed their young with milk from mammary glands‬ ‭2)‬ ‭Birds‬ ∙‭ ‬‭are endothermic (warm-blooded)‬ ∙‭ ‬‭have feathers over their skin‬ ∙‭ ‬‭have lungs for breathing‬ ∙‭ ‬‭lay eggs‬ ‭ )‬‭Reptiles‬ 3 ∙‭ ‬‭are ectothermic (cold-blooded)‬ ∙‭ ‬‭have dry scaly skin‬ ∙‭ ‬‭have lungs for breathing‬ ‭∙‬‭lay eggs‬ ‭31‬ ‭ )‬‭Amphibians‬ 4 ∙‭ ‬‭are ectodermic (cold-blooded)‬ ‭∙‬‭have‬ ∙‭ ‬‭are ectodermic (cold-blooded)‬ ‭∙‬‭have‬ ‭moist, scaly skin‬ ‭smooth, moist skin‬ ∙ ‭ ‬‭have lungs for‬ ‭∙‬‭have gills for breathing‬ ‭∙‬‭lay eggs‬ ‭ ‬‭lay eggs‬ ‭breathing‬ ∙ ‭A‭d ‬ aptations In Vertebrates‬ ‭5)‬‭Fish‬ ‭ any vertebrates have special features in their appearance or behaviour to help them live‬ M ‭in their environment. These features are called adaptations. For example,‬ ‭∙‬‭desert foxes are the same colour as the desert sand‬‭and they have very large ears that‬ ‭lose heat to keep the body cool. It rests in its cool underground den during the day and‬ ‭comes out at night to hunt for food.‬ ∙‭ ‬‭polar bears have layers of fat under the skin and‬‭thuick white fur on top to keep them‬ ‭warm. The white fur also helps them to blend in with their surroundings. They have fur‬ ‭covering the soles of their feet to protect them from the snow and long curved claws to‬ ‭help them grip the ice and their prey.‬ ‭32‬ ‭ lant Groups‬ P ‭There are four main groups of plants.‬ ‭1)‬‭Mosses‬ ∙‭ ‬‭have simple leaves and very simple roots but no‬‭stem‬ ∙‭ ‬‭reproduce by spores‬ ‭ )‬‭Ferns‬ 2 ∙‭ ‬‭have leaves, roots and stem‬ ∙‭ ‬‭the leaves are called fronds‬ ‭∙‬‭reproduce by spores‬ ‭ )‬‭Conifers‬ 3 ∙‭ ‬‭have leaves, roots and stems‬ ‭∙‬‭reproduce by seeds in cones‬ ‭33‬ ‭ )‬‭Flowering Plants‬ 4 ∙‭ ‬‭have leaves, roots and stems‬ ‭∙‬‭reproduce by seeds produced in flowers‬ ‭ ‬‭daptations In Plants‬ A ‭Many plants have special features to help them live in their environment. These features are‬ ‭called adaptations. For example,‬ ‭∙‬‭desert plants have a variety of adaptations in their‬‭leaves to reduce water loss. Some‬ ‭leaves are rolled into spikes, some leaves are covered in shiny hairs or have a shiny‬ ‭surface to reflect the Sun’s heat, some leaves hang vertically so that the Sun does not hit‬ ‭their surface.‬ ∙‭ ‬‭mangrove plants grow in muddy, salty water. They‬‭have a dense mass of rots that help‬ t‭ o stabilise the mud. Also, the roots are adapted so that they do not take in too much‬ ‭salt with the water and the leaves remove salt from the plant.‬ ‭ lossary‬ G ‭cell, nucleus, cytoplasm, cell membrane, unicellular, multicellular, microorganism, bacteria,‬ ‭classification, classify, characteristics, features, vertebrate, mammal, reptile, amphibian‬ ‭34‬ S‭ tudy Questions‬ ‭1. Draw a labelled diagram of a plant cell showing the nucleus, cytoplasm, cell‬ ‭membrane and cell wall.‬ ‭2. Describe the function of the following cell structures‬ ‭a) nucleus‬ ‭b) cytoplasm‬ ‭c) cell membrane‬ ‭d) cell wall‬ ‭3. What is the difference between a plant and an animal cell?‬ ‭4. What is a unicellular organism? Give an example.‬ ‭5. What is a multicellular organism? Give an example.‬ ‭6. How do unicellular organisms reproduce?‬ ‭7. Identify one way that bacteria can be harmful.‬ ‭8. Identify one way that bacteria can be helpful.‬ ‭9. Name the five vertebrate groups.‬ ‭10. Describe the features of the five vertebrate groups.‬ ‭11. Describe some adaptations of vertebrates to their environment. 12. Describe the‬ ‭features of these plant groups – mosses, ferns, conifers, flowering plants.‬ ‭13. Describe some adaptations of plants to their environment.‬ ‭35‬ ‭Matter‬ ‭ atter, Mass, Volume And Density‬ M ‭Matter‬‭is all of the substances that make up objects‬‭in the universe.‬ ‭Mass‬‭is the amount of matter in a substance or object.‬‭Mass is measured on a balance and‬ ‭is given in grams (g) and kilograms (kg).‬ ‭Volume‬‭is the amount of space that a substance or‬‭object takes up. The volume of a liquid is‬ ‭measured with a measuring cylinder and is given in millitres (mL) and litres (L).‬ ‭Density‬‭is‬ ‭the mass of 1cubic centimetre (cm‬‭3‭)‬ of a substance‬‭or object. Density is measured in grams‬ ‭per cubic centimetre (g/ cm‬‭3‭)‬.‬ S‭ tates Of Matter‬ ‭All matter is made of tiny particles that are too small to be seen. The three states of matter‬ ‭are solids, liquid and gases.‬ ‭∙‬‭In‬‭solids‬‭, the particles are packed closely together‬‭and they are held tightly together. They‬ ‭cannot move around but can only vibrate from side to side. This is why solids have a‬ ‭definite volume and a definite shape and they cannot be compressed into a smaller‬ ‭volume. An example of a solid is steel.‬ ∙‭ ‬‭In‬‭liquids‬‭, the particles are close together and‬‭they are held loosely together. They can roll‬ ‭over each other. This is why liquids have a definite volume but take the shape of their‬ ‭container. They cannot be compressed into a smaller volume. An example of a liquid is‬ ‭water.‬ ∙‭ ‬‭In‬‭gases‬‭, the particles are a long way apart and‬‭are free to move anywhere in the‬ ‭container. This is why gases have no definite volume and no definite shape and they can‬ ‭be compressed into a smaller volume. An example of a gas is oxygen.‬ ‭36‬ E‭ xpansion And Contraction‬ ∙‭ ‬‭Expansion‬‭occurs as follows. When a substance is‬‭heated, its particles gain energy and so‬ ‭they move faster. This causes the particles to collide more often and push each other‬ ‭apart so that they take up more space. As a result, the substance expands. Railway tracks‬ ‭are laid with gaps between them. When they are heated, they expand and fill the gaps.‬ ‭Without the gaps, they would buckle.‬ ∙‭ ‬‭Contraction‬‭occurs as follows. When a substance‬‭is cooled, its particles lose energy and‬ ‭so they move slower. This causes the particles to collide less often and come closer‬ ‭together so that they take up less space. As a result, the substance contracts. Overhead‬ ‭electricity cables hang loosely between the poles. When they are cold, they contract and‬ ‭become shorter. If they did not hang loosely, they would snap.‬ ‭ hange Of State‬ C ‭When substances are heated and cooled they often change state. There are five changes of‬ ‭state.‬ ∙‭ ‬‭melting‬‭– a substance is heated and changes from‬‭solid to liquid‬ ∙‭ ‬‭evaporation‬‭– a substance is heated and changes‬‭from liquid to gas‬ ∙‭ ‬‭sublimation‬‭– a substance is heated and changes‬‭from solid to gas‬ ∙‭ ‬‭condensation‬‭– a substance is cooled and changes‬‭from gas to liquid‬ ‭∙‬‭freezing‬‭– a substance is cooled and changes from‬‭liquid to solid‬ ‭ elting Point And Boiling Point‬ M ‭Water‬ ∙‭ ‬‭melts at 0‬‭O‬‭C‬ ∙‭ ‬‭freezes at 0‬‭O‬‭C‬ ∙‭ ‬‭evaporates at 100‬‭O‬‭C‬ ∙‭ ‬‭condenses at 100‬‭O‬‭C‬ ‭0‭O‬ ‬‭C is the melting point of water‬ ‭100‬‭O‬‭C is the boiling point of water‬ ‭37‬ T‭ he‬‭melting point‬‭of a substance is the temperature‬‭at which it changes from solid to liquid‬ ‭or liquid to solid.‬ ‭The‬‭boiling point‬‭of a substance is the temperature‬‭at which it changes from liquid to gas or‬ ‭gas to liquid.‬ ‭Glossary‬ ‭balance, measuring cylinder, matter, mass, volume, solid, liquid, gas, particle,‬ ‭compressibility, expansion, contraction, evaporation, condensation, melting, freezing,‬ S‭ tudy Questions‬ ‭1. What is matter?‬ ‭2. What is the meaning of the word “mass”?‬ ‭3. Which piece of equipment is used to measure the mass of an object? 4.‬ ‭What is the meaning of the word “volume”?‬ ‭5. Which piece of equipment is used to measure the volume of an object? 6.‬ ‭Name the three states of matter.‬ ‭7. Describe the movement of particles in solids, liquids and gases.‬ ‭8. Using the particle model, describe and give reasons for the volume, shape and‬ ‭compressibility of‬ ‭a) solids‬ ‭b) liquids‬ ‭c) gases‬ ‭9. Using the particle model of matter, explain why a metal expands when it is heated and‬ ‭contracts when it is cooled.‬ ‭10. Describe an example of a situation in which a substance‬ ‭a) expands‬ ‭b) contracts‬ ‭11. Which change of state occurs when a substance freezes?‬ ‭12. Which change of state occurs when a substance melts?‬ ‭13. Which change of state occurs when a substance evaporates?‬ ‭14. Which change of state occurs when a substance condenses?‬ ‭15. What is the melting point of water?‬ ‭16. What is the boiling point of water?‬ ‭17. Complete this table of changes of state to show whether particles gain or lose‬ ‭energy and move faster or slower.‬ ‭Change of State‬ ‭Energy‬ ‭Move‬ ‭Gain‬ ‭Lose‬ ‭Faster‬ ‭Slower‬ ‭melting‬ ‭evaporation‬ ‭condensation‬ ‭freezing‬ ‭38‬ ‭Mixtures‬ ‭ ure Substances And Mixtures‬ P ‭The materials around us can be grouped into pure substances and mixtures.‬ ∙‭ ‬‭Pure substances‬‭contain only one substance. They‬‭always have the same properties no‬ ‭matter where they come from. Examples are sugar, gold, pure water and helium gas.‬ ‭∙‬‭Mixtures‬‭are substances that have several different‬‭pure substances mixed together. Examples‬ ‭are lipstick, concrete, soft drink and air.‬ S‭ olute, Solvent And Solution‬ ‭A‬‭soluble‬‭substance is a substance that dissolves.‬‭An insoluble substance is a substance that‬ ‭does not dissolve.‬ ‭When a‬‭solute‬‭dissolves in a‬‭solvent‬‭, it forms a‬‭solution‬‭.‬‭In a sugar solution, the sugar is the‬ ‭solute and the water is the solvent.‬ ‭39‬ ‭Some solutions are coloured and some are colourless but all solutions are transparent.‬ ∙‭ ‬‭A‬‭dilute‬‭solution contains a small amount of solute‬‭in the solvent.‬ ∙‭ ‬‭A‬‭concentrated‬‭solution contains a large amount‬‭of solute in the solvent.‬ ∙‭ ‬‭A‬‭saturated‬‭solution is a solution that cannot dissolve‬‭any more solute‬ T‭ he Importance Of Water As A Solvent‬ ‭Water‬‭is a very important solvent because it dissolves‬‭many substances in a wide variety of‬ ‭situations. For example,‬ ∙‭ ‬‭many drinks, such as fruit juice and soft drink,‬‭are water solutions‬ ∙‭ ‬‭almost all chemical reactions in the human body‬‭occur between substances dissolved in‬ ‭water in the cells and the blood‬ ∙‭ ‬‭water dissolves minerals in the soil and carries‬‭them into plants through the roots‬ ∙‭ ‬ ‭many industrial chemicals, such as acids, are made by dissolving chemicals in water.‬ F‭ iltration And Sieving‬ ‭Filtration‬‭is a method of separation that uses a filter‬‭to separate an insoluble substance‬ ‭from a mixture. A filter contains tiny holes that trap the insoluble substance but let the rest‬ ‭of the mixture pass through. Filters are used to separate‬ ∙‭ ‬‭dirt from water in swimming pools‬ ∙‭ ‬‭dirt from petrol and oil in cars‬ ∙‭ ‬‭dust from air in vacuum cleaners‬ ∙‭ ‬‭coffee grounds from coffee in a coffee machine‬ ∙‭ ‬‭solid particles from air in a mask‬ ‭ ‬‭sieve‬‭is also a filter but with larger holes. Sieves‬‭are used to separate‬ A ∙‭ ‬‭spaghetti from water in a colander‬ ∙‭ ‬‭tea leaves from tea in a tea strainer‬ ‭40‬ E‭ vaporation And Crystallisation‬ ‭Evaporation‬‭and‬‭crystallisation‬‭are used to separate‬‭soluble substances from solutions. In‬ ‭this process, the solvent evaporates and the solute crystallises. Evaporation and‬ ‭crystallisation are used to obtain salt from seawater.‬ ‭ istillation‬ D ‭Distillation is used to separate pure water from solutions. In this process, the solution is‬ ‭boiled, the steam is collected and then cooled and turned back into liquid water. This water‬ ‭is pure and is called distilled water. Distillation is used to obtain pure water from sea water‬ ‭and is called desalination.‬ ‭ agnetic Attraction‬ M ‭Magnets‬‭attract substances made of iron. Magnetic‬‭attraction is used to separate iron and‬ ‭steel from mixtures. For example, it is used in can recycling centres to separate iron cans‬ ‭from aluminium cans.‬ ‭41‬ ‭ hromatography‬ C ‭Chromatography‬‭is used to separate small amounts of‬‭chemicals from a solvent. In this‬ ‭process, the chemicals are dissolved in a solvent and then the solvent is allowed to soak‬ ‭through a material such as filter paper. Some chemicals are carried through the filter paper‬ ‭faster than others. This means that they travel different distances along the filter paper and‬ ‭so they are separated. If the chemicals are different colours, they can be clearly seen on the‬ ‭filter paper. Chromatography is used to detect‬ ∙‭ ‬‭colours in ink‬ ∙‭ ‬‭harmful pesticides in food‬ ‭∙‬‭drugs in urine samples‬ ‭ lossary‬ G ‭pure substance, mixture, dissolve, soluble, insoluble, solute, solvent, solution, dilute,‬ ‭concentrated, filtration, sieving, evaporation, crystallisation, magnetic attraction,‬ ‭chromatography‬ S‭ tudy Questions‬ ‭1. Sugar is soluble in water. What does “soluble” mean?‬ ‭2. In a saltwater solution, what is the‬ ‭a) solute?‬ ‭b) solvent?‬ ‭3. What is the difference between a dilute solution and a concentrated solution? 4.‬ ‭How would you separate these mixtures in a lab:‬ ‭a) salt from saltwater?‬ ‭b) iron nails from sawdust?‬ ‭c) powder from water?‬ ‭d) colours in ink?‬ ‭5. Describe one use of‬ ‭a) filtration or sieving‬ ‭b) evaporation and crystallisation‬ c‭ ) distillation‬ ‭d) magnetic attraction‬ ‭42‬ ‭e) chromatography‬ ‭Planet Earth‬ S‭ tructure Of The Earth‬ ‭The Earth is a huge ball of rock. It is made of four layers. –‬ ∙‭ ‬‭crust‬‭– made of solid rock‬ ‭∙‬‭mantle‬‭– mostly made of solid rock with some molten‬‭rock in a layer called the‬ ‭asthenosphere‬ ∙‭ ‬‭outer core‬‭– made of molten iron and nickel‬ ∙‭ ‬‭inner core‬‭– made of solid iron and nickel‬ ‭The‬‭lithosphere‬‭is the name given to the layer of‬‭solid rock in the crust and upper mantle.‬ ‭ inerals‬ M ‭A mineral is a chemical compound that is found in the Earth’s crust, either on its own or‬ ‭with other minerals in rock. Therefore every rock is made of two or more minerals.‬ T‭ ypes Of Rocks‬ ‭There are three types of rocks.‬ ‭1)‬‭igneous rocks‬‭– are formed when magma and lava‬‭cool‬ ‭2)‬‭sedimentary rocks‬‭– are formed when sediments are‬‭compacted or cemented together‬ ‭3)‬‭metamorphic rocks‬‭– are formed when igneous rocks‬‭and sedimentary rocks are put‬ ‭under intense heat or pressure‬ ‭43‬ ‭ eathering And Erosion‬ W ‭Weathering‬‭is the breaking down of rocks into small‬‭fragments called sediments. Two types‬ ‭of weathering are‬ ‭∙‬‭physical weathering‬‭– rocks are broken down into‬‭small fragments by physical factors in‬ ‭the environment such as extreme temperature changes‬ ‭∙‬‭chemical weathering‬‭– rocks are changed into new‬‭substances by chemical factors in‬ ‭the environment such as acid rain.‬ E‭ rosion‬‭is the process of moving fragments of weathered‬‭rock to other places. This is done‬ ‭by agents of erosion such as wind, rivers, waves and glaciers.‬ ‭ ater Cycle‬ W ‭The water cycle continually supplies Earth with fresh water. It is called a cycle because it has‬ ‭no beginning and no end and so it never stops. The three stages of the water cycle are‬ ∙ ‭‬ ‭evaporation‬‭– water on Earth’s surface changes from‬‭liquid to vapour and rises into the‬ ‭atmosphere‬ ‭∙‬‭condensation‬‭– water vapour in the atmosphere changes‬‭from vapour to liquid and‬ ‭forms clouds‬ ‭∙‬‭precipitation‬‭– liquid water in the atmosphere falls‬‭to the Earth’s surface as rain, snow‬ ‭or hail.‬ ‭44‬ T‭ he Atmosphere‬ ‭The atmosphere is a mixture of gases surrounding the Earth. It is made of several layers –‬ ‭the troposphere, stratosphere and ionosphere. About 78% of the atmosphere is nitrogen‬ ‭and 21% is oxygen. The remaining 1% is a mixture of numerous gases including carbon‬ ‭dioxide, neon, helium, methane, hydrogen and ozone.‬ ‭The carbon dioxide in the atmosphere traps heat from the sun to keep the Earth warm but if‬ ‭the amount of carbon dioxide increases too much, the Earth will heat up. This called the‬ ‭greenhouse effect.‬ ‭The layer of ozone in the atmosphere blocks out more than 95% of the sun’s UV rays. If the‬ ‭ozone layer is damaged so that it has holes in it, then too much UV light will reach the‬ ‭Earth’s surface causing sunburn and skin cancer.‬ ‭ lossary‬ G ‭core, mantle, crust, lithosphere, mineral, weathering, erosion, deposition, sedimentary,‬ ‭igneous, metamorphic, evaporation, condensation, precipitation, atmosphere, ozone,‬ ‭greenhouse‬ S‭ tudy Questions‬ ‭1.‬‭Draw a labelled diagram showing the core, mantle,‬‭crust and lithosphere.‬ ‭2.‬‭What are minerals?‬ ‭3.‬‭Explain how these rocks form:‬ ‭a) igneous‬ ‭b) sedimentary‬ ‭c) metamorphic‬ ‭4.‬‭Rocks are weathered by physical change and chemical‬‭change. Explain one example of‬ ‭each.‬ ‭5.‬‭Draw a labelled diagram of the water cycle showing‬‭where evaporation, condensation‬ ‭and precipitation occur.‬ ‭6.‬‭In the water cycle, what happens in‬ ‭7.‬‭evaporation‬ ‭8.‬‭condensation‬ ‭9.‬‭precipitation?‬ ‭10.‬‭Which two gases make up most of the atmosphere? What is the percentage of each one‬ ‭in the air?‬ ‭11.‬‭What is ozone needed for?‬ ‭12.‬‭What is carbon dioxide needed for?‬ ‭45‬ ‭Producers and Consumers‬ ‭ ater Transport In Plants‬ W ‭The‬‭roots‬‭of a plant take in water.‬ ‭The‬‭stem‬‭of a plant transports water from the roots‬‭to the leaves through tubes called‬ ‭xylem‬‭.‬ ‭The‬‭leaves‬‭of a plant have tiny holes called‬‭stomata‬‭that release excess water into the air in‬ ‭a process called‬‭transpiration‬‭.‬ ‭ any Australian plants have adaptations that allow them to live in high temperature, low‬ M ‭water environments. These include‬ ∙‭ ‬‭Leaves rolled into spikes to reduce the number of‬‭stomata‬ ∙‭ ‬‭Leaves that hang vertically to keep the leaf cool‬‭by reducing the amount of sunlight‬ ‭striking the surface of the leaf‬ ‭∙‬‭Leaves that have a shiny, waxy covering that keeps‬‭the leaf cool by reflecting sunlight‬ ‭ hotosynthesis‬ P ‭Photosynthesis is the process in which plants make their own food. They combine water and‬ ‭carbon dioxide in a series of chemical reactions driven by energy absorbed from sunlight by‬ ‭the chlorophyll in the leaves. The products of photosynthesis are glucose and oxygen. The‬ ‭glucose is used as food for the plant and the oxygen is released into air to be used by plants‬ ‭and animals.‬ ‭46‬ ‭ espiration‬ R ‭Respiration is the process in plants and animals that uses glucose and oxygen to produce‬ ‭energy. The energy is used for growth, repair and reproduction.‬ ‭Respiration is closely linked to photosynthesis because photosynthesis in plants provides the‬ ‭glucose to be used in respiration in plants and animals.‬ ‭ roducers, Consumers And Decomposers‬ P ‭Plants make their own food in photosynthesis. Animals obtain their food by eating plants‬ ‭and/or other animals.‬ ‭Plants are called‬‭producers‬‭because they make their‬‭own food.‬ ‭Animals are called‬‭consumers‬‭because they obtain their‬‭food by eating plants and other‬ ‭animals. There are three types of consumers.‬ ∙‭ ‬‭Herbivores‬‭– eat plants only‬ ∙‭ ‬‭Carnivores‬‭– east animals only‬ ∙‭ ‬‭Omnivores‬‭– eat both plants and animals‬ ‭Some organisms, such as bacteria, are‬‭decomposers‬‭.‬‭They feed on the wastes and dead‬ ‭remains of plants and animals. They break down the wastes and remains into carbon‬ ‭dioxide, water and minerals which then go back into the air and soil to be reused by plants.‬ ‭47‬ F‭ ood Chains And Food Webs‬ ‭A‬‭food chain‬‭shows how energy is passed on from one‬‭organism to another. Each organism‬ ‭in the chain obtains food by eating the organism before it. The first organism is a producer,‬ ‭such as a plant, because it makes its own food. The other organisms are consumers. The first‬ ‭consumer is a herbivore and then the others following it are either carnivores or omnivores.‬ ‭A food chain is shown below.‬ I‭n any place there are numerous food chains. They can be combined into a‬‭food web‬‭to‬ ‭show the complete picture of feeding relationships in that place. A food web is shown‬ ‭below.‬ ‭Bushfires, Drought And Flood‬ ‭ ushfires‬‭have both negative and positive effects on the environment. They destroy large‬ B ‭areas of vegetation and many of the animals living in those areas. With the vegetation removed,‬ ‭the soil is exposed to wind and water and so it is easily eroded. However, some Australian plants‬ ‭need fire for their seeds to begin growing and so they regenerate quickly‬ ‭48‬ ‭after fires. Ashes from the fire provide nutrients for the soil that allow plants to recover and‬ ‭seeds to grow quickly. Some Australian animals survive fires by either quickly moving away‬ ‭from fires or sheltering in burrows or logs, allowing them to return to the area after the fire‬ ‭and quickly repopulate it.‬ ‭Drought‬ ‭Drought creeps up over a number of years when rainfall is low. The effects can be‬ ‭devastating to wildlife as well as to farmers. Drought kills native plants and animals as well‬ ‭as crops and livestock and the destruction of vegetation leads to soil erosion. Drought‬ ‭depletes lakes and rivers, causing the death of many aquatic plants and animals. Finally,‬ ‭drought increases the chance of bushfire, dust storms and toxic algal blooms in rivers.‬ F‭ lood‬ ‭Floods cover vast areas of land, submerging plants and animals and causing their‬ ‭destruction. They also wash away soil, causing soil erosion. However, floods can also have‬ ‭positive effects on ecosystems. They replenish ground water and soil water, they wash‬ ‭excess salt from the soil and they provide water for fish and other animals in arid areas to‬ ‭breed.‬ ‭ lossary‬ G ‭xylem, stomata, transpiration, photosynthesis, respiration, ecosystem, producer, consumer,‬ ‭decomposer‬ S‭ tudy Questions‬ ‭1. Describe the role of roots in water absorption.‬ ‭2. Describe the role of the stem in water movement.‬ ‭3. What are xylem?‬ ‭4. Describe the role of the leaves in transpiration.‬ ‭5. What are stomata?‬ ‭6. In which part of the plant does photosynthesis occur?‬ ‭7. Which materials are needed by plants for photosynthesis?‬ ‭8. Which materials are produced by plants for photosynthesis?‬ ‭9. Which materials are needed by plants for respiration?‬ ‭10. Which materials are produced by plants for respiration?‬ ‭11. Why are photosynthesis and respiration important for all living things? 12.‬ ‭Name one Australian ecosystem.‬ ‭13. Using an example of a food web, describe how the producers, consumers and‬ ‭decomposers are related.‬ ‭14. Discuss some effects on Australian ecosystems of‬ a‭ ) bushfires‬ ‭b) drought‬ ‭c) flood‬ ‭49‬ ‭Space‬ ‭ odels Of The Universe‬ M ‭Earth-centred model‬ ‭In ancient times when there was no technology for looking at the universe, people could‬ ‭only use their eyes to make observations. They saw the Sun rise in the East and set in the‬ ‭West and concluded that the Sun was moving across the sky. Aristotle used his observations‬ ‭of planets and stars in the night sky to propose an Earth-centred model of the universe. In‬ ‭this model, the Earth was the centre with the planets and stars moving in circular orbits‬ ‭around it.‬ ‭Sun-centred model‬ ‭Aristarchus was the first astronomer to suggest that the Sun was at the centre of the‬ ‭universe. He used his observations and estimates of the relative sizes of the Sun, Earth and‬ ‭Moon and their distances from each other to argue that it was more logical to place the‬ ‭largest object, the Sun, at the centre rather than the smaller Earth. He claimed that the‬ ‭apparent motion of the planets and stars was due to the Earth rotating on its axis once per‬ ‭day.‬ ‭ ith the invention of the telescope, more accurate observations could be made which‬ W ‭confirmed the Sun-centred model‬‭.‬ ‭Earth centred model Sun centred model‬ ‭50‬ ‭ ay And Night‬ D ‭Earth has day and night because of Earth’s rotation on its axis. As it spins, one side of the‬ ‭Earth faces the sun and the other side does not. The side facing the sun receives sunlight‬ ‭and so it has day. The other side does not receive sunlight and so it has night. One rotation‬ ‭of the Earth takes 24 hours.‬ ‭ ne Year‬ O ‭The earth revolves around the sun. One revolution of the Earth around the sun takes one‬ ‭year.‬ S‭ easons‬ ‭The Earth has seasons because Earth is tilted on its axis. When a hemisphere is tilted‬ ‭towards the sun it has summer and when it is tilted away from the sun it has winter. In‬ ‭between, it has autumn and spring‬‭.‬ ‭51‬ ‭ ravity‬ G ‭Gravity is a force that attracts objects. All bodies in space have gravity that attracts other‬ ‭objects in space towards them. For example, the Sun’s gravity attracts the planets and keeps‬ ‭them in orbit around it. The Earth’s gravity keeps the Moon in orbit around it. It also keeps‬ ‭objects on the surface of the Earth. For an object to leave Earth, it must exert a force greater‬ ‭than the Earth’s gravitational force‬‭.‬ T‭ ides‬ ‭Tides are periodic rises and falls of large bodies of water. They are caused by the‬ ‭gravitational pull of the Moon and the Sun on the Earth.‬ T‭ he gravitational pull of the Moon on the Earth causes the oceans to bulge out in the‬ ‭direction of the Moon. They bulge out on the other side because the Earth is being pulled‬ ‭towards the Moon and the water in the oceans is left behind. The Sun has less effect on the‬ ‭tides but when the Sun and the Moon line up (New Moon and Full Moon), very high tides,‬ ‭called king tides or spring tides, occur.‬ L‭ ight And Sound‬ ‭Light is a form of energy that does not need a medium (material) to travel through. It travels‬ ‭at 300,000 km/s and it can travel through a vacuum. Light from the Sun travels 150 million‬ ‭kilometres through the vacuum of space to Earth in 8 ½ minutes.‬ S‭ ound is a form of energy that does need a medium to travel through and so it cannot travel‬ ‭through a vacuum. It travels through air at 340 m/s. Because there is no air on the Moon,‬ ‭sound does not travel on the Moon as it does on Earth.‬ ‭52‬ S‭ olar System‬ ‭The solar system is one small part of the universe. The sun is at the centre and the planets‬ ‭orbit it. The eight planets in order from the Sun are Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter,‬ ‭Saturn, Uranus and Neptune.‬ ‭The Solar System also contains comets, asteroids, meteors and meteorites.‬ ‭ ‬‭comet‬‭is a small mass made of ice mixed with dust,‬‭frozen carbon dioxide and organic‬ A ‭matter. Comets orbit the Sun in a long, narrow orbit. As a comet approaches the Sun, some‬ ‭of the mass evaporates and forms two tails that point away from the Sun.‬ ‭Asteroids‬‭are small rocky objects left over from the‬‭formation of the solar system. They‬ ‭orbit the Sun in the asteroid belt which is located between Mars and Jupiter.‬ ‭53‬ ‭ hen a chunk of space rock enters the Earth’s atmosphere the friction between it and the‬ W ‭air causes it to burn up. This burning rock is called a‬‭meteor‬‭.‬ S‭ pace rock that lands on the Earth’s surface without completely burning up is called a‬ ‭meteorite‬‭.‬ S‭ tars‬ ‭Beyond the solar system are galaxies of stars.‬ ‭A‬‭star‬‭is a sphere of gas, mainly hydrogen and helium,‬‭that produces its own heat and light‬ ‭by nuclear reactions.‬ ‭A‬‭galaxy‬‭is a group of millions or billions of stars‬‭held together by gravity.‬ ‭A‬‭nebula‬‭is a cloud of gas and dust in space that‬‭eventually becomes a star.‬ ‭54‬ L‭ ight Year‬ ‭A light year is equal to the distance travelled by light in one year. Large distances in space‬ ‭are measured in light years rather than kilometres.‬ ‭ lossary‬ G ‭axis, rotation, revolution, hydrosphere, solar system, star, galaxy, nebula, light year‬ S‭ tudy Questions‬ ‭1. What is the difference between an Earth-centred model of the universe and a Sun‬ ‭centred model?‬ ‭2. Describe the observation/s that led Aristotle to propose an Earth-centred model of the‬ ‭universe.‬ ‭3. Describe the observation/s that led Aristarchus to propose a Sun-centred model of the‬ ‭universe.‬ ‭4. Which technology provided evidence for the Sun-centred model?‬ ‭5. Explain why Earth has day and night.‬ ‭6. What is the name given to the time taken for the earth to revolve once around the‬ ‭sun?‬ ‭7. Explain why Earth has the seasons.‬ ‭8. Explain why Earth has tides.‬ ‭9. Explain why light energy travels on Earth and in space but sound energy only travels on‬ ‭earth and not in space.‬ ‭10. Name the eight planets in our solar system in order from the sun.‬ ‭11. What is a‬ ‭a) comet?‬ ‭b) asteroid?‬ ‭c) meteor?‬ ‭d) meteorite?‬ ‭12. What is the role of gravity in our Solar System?‬ ‭13. What is a‬ ‭a) galaxy?‬ ‭b) star?‬ ‭c) nebula?‬ ‭14. What is a light year?‬ ‭55‬

Use Quizgecko on...
Browser
Browser