Reuniting Kids w/ Nature – Erosion (1)

If you live outside of a metropolitan area, all you have to do to see the effects of erosion on the land is take a walk or a short drive after a heavy rainstorm. However, not everyone has that luxury, so creating your own experiment is the next best thing! PLaying with rocks, sticks, and dirt as a way to observe what happens to the landscape when water runs over it is an amazing way to learn about our rivers and valleys as well as how to work with Nature to avoid soil (and possible property) loss.

MATERIALS:

A cookie sheet, dirt, natural materials (sticks, rocks, wood chips, fallen leaves, etc.), a large cup or water pitcher, water

TIME FRAME:

15 – 60 minutes

PROCEDURE:

  1. Take your cookie sheet outside and fill it with dirt, making sure to pack it in as tightly as possible
  2. Gather your natural materials and begin adding them to the dirt on your cookie sheet.  Place small rocks in various places, stick sticks in the dirt to act like trees.  You are creating a landscape, so think about your area; rivers, prairies, mountains, etc.
  3. Place your filled cookie sheet at an angle using a rock, a step or the roots of a tree (you can hold it with at an angle with one hand, too, if you have too)
  4. Starting at the top of your cookie sheet, slowly pour your water onto the landscape you’ve created and watch what happens as the water rolls down the landscape

REFLECTION:

What happened to your landscape?  What did the water do to the dirt?  Did your trees and rocks stay where you placed them or did they get washed way?  Why do you think that might have happened?

TIPS & IMAGININGS:

Imagine you are a great tree that has grown on the banks of a river for hundreds of years… how might you see the landscape change?  Has the river changed it’s course?  Has it  ever flooded and wet your toes?  What animals have moved in (and out) of the neighborhood?

CONNECTIONS:

After a heavy rain, what do the streets and river beds look like?  If your streets are all made of asphalt, they shouldn’t look much different after a big rain, but if they’re made of dirt or gravel, some of it might be displaced.  Why do you think that happens?

TIDBITS:

Erosion refers to the process by which the surface of the earth is worn and carried away from a site by the natural influences of forces such as wind, water, and gravity.
 
xoxo,
M
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Written by Melissa @ Ever Growing Farm