Imagine a caterpillar with soft, fancy, velvety skin; that’s what a velvet worm looks like. However, unlike most caterpillars ...
Add ¼ teaspoon of borax. Mix until as much borax dissolves as possible. This is your borax solution. If you would like your slime to be a certain color, add one or two drops of food coloring to your ...
Slime molds have lived on Earth since long before the emergence of the human species. As single-celled organisms, slime molds do not have brains or nerves. And yet, they have ways of processing ...
Slime has become a hallmark of childhood. While it's fun for the kids and can make for a great sensory play experience, it can also ruin their clothing, making it a headache for parents everywhere ...
ACS president Dorothy J. Phillips, left, shares some cool chemistry fun and a smile with a kid and parent at the Kids Zone ...
The Museum’s slime mould collection has a global scope and was the foundation ... Access to some collections will be affected as we prepare for the move to our new collections, science and ...
A robot made of magnetic slime with a custard-like consistency can navigate narrow passages, grasp objects and fix broken circuits. It could be deployed inside the body to perform tasks such as ...
Create your own magnetic slime and discover how ferromagnetic materials interact with magnetic fields. You'll learn about magnetism, viscosity, and chemical reactions while making a fascinating ...
As a starting point pupils could list the similarities and differences between the life cycle of the fungi and slime mould. This clip will be relevant for teaching Science/ Geography. This topic ...