Where Does All the Snow Go? 5i645g

What Is This Video? 5h7072

All the snow that falls in a city can’t soak into the ground. There’s too much concrete in the way! So what do all those plows and trucks and front-loaders DO with too much snow?

Conversation Starters v6l1e

Ask: 6k2e4z
  • Where do dump trucks carry all the snow? (Outside the city, where there’s more space to pile it up and less concrete to keep the snowmelt from soaking into the ground.)

  • Plum sings about the animal’s “H2O” (pronounced “aich two oh”). What’s that? (It’s the symbol for water—in this case in the form of snow.)

  • How might removing all that H2O affect city animals? (Melted snow provides drinking water.)

  • How else or where else could thirsty animals find water?

Explore Some More 4a2v6i

Ice Sculptures 4ec1t

Have a little creative fun with melting frozen H2O—ice, that is, not snow. You’ll need balloons in a bunch of sizes and shapes. Find those long, skinny ones that look like snakes if you can. Put a few drops of food coloring (optional) and a few grains of sand in each balloon. (The sand helps ice form.) Fill the balloons with water and tie them off. If it’s below freezing outside, curve the skinny ones into fun shapes, set them in a shady spot outdoors, and watch them freeze. (Otherwise, put them in a freezer.) Unpeel the balloons and watch your ice sculptures slowly melt outside. It may take days—or weeks—if you live in a very cold place!

Curriculum Topics 152q1i

ecosystems, water

Activity Type 4bs1u

indoor and outdoor

Standards 1c3s42

Next Generation Science Standards 6l3r37

Disciplinary Core Ideas 1p501c
Science and Engineering Practices d4i1n
Crosscutting Concepts 6h54