Pop Bottle Science

Pop Bottle Science by Lynn Brunelle is an engaging science experiment kit published by Workman Publishing Company on September 1, 2004. This edition includes a 128-page guide that features 79 hands-on experiments designed to explore various scientific fields such as chemistry, physics, biology, and astronomy. The kit is packaged in a durable, shatter-proof plastic bottle that serves as a miniature science lab, complete with a removable top that functions as a funnel.
Readers will find a lively, fully illustrated guide that provides clear instructions for each experiment, starting with a challenge and concluding with an explanation of the underlying scientific principles. The activities encourage exploration and discovery, allowing kids to create a volcano, simulate weather phenomena, and investigate concepts like buoyancy and inertia. The kit also includes essential tools such as a measuring cup, balloons, and a cork bottle stopper, making it easy to perform experiments at home with readily available materials.
Official synopsis Publisher
It’s pure bottled magic! A science experiment kit that’s as much fun as a bubbly soda!
Pop Bottle Science presents 79 easy, hands-on experiments that probe the worlds of chemistry, physics, biology, geology, weather, the human body, and even astronomy! It’s a book and kit, all packaged in a bottle that makes a perfect miniature science lab: see-through, flexible, air-tight when necessary, made out of a durable, shatter-proof plastic and designed with a removable top that doubles as a funnel.
In the kit is a lively, fully illustrated 96-page guide to astonishing and easy science experiments to perform at home with materials you have on hand. Each experiment begins with a challenge and ends with an explanation of the scientific principles involved. Kids can design a volcano and watch it erupt. Create a tornado-maker and see how twisters work. Make quicksand–is it solid or liquid? Observe photosynthesis in action. Simulate Jupiter’s giant red spot, investigate buoyancy, demonstrate inertia, and discover the Bernoulli principle–which allows planes to fly. Plus, turn the bottle into a barometer, a thermometer, walkie-talkie, trombone, compass–or groovy lava lamp.
Kit also contains tools for the science experiments: measuring cup, balloons, and a cork bottle stopper.
Author
Publisher
Topics
FAQ
What is “Pop Bottle Science” about?
Who is the author of “Pop Bottle Science”?
When was “Pop Bottle Science” published?
What is the ISBN for “Pop Bottle Science”?
What are the book details (language, pages, edition)?
