If you floated down a river, where would you end up?

If you floated down a river, where would you end up?

Lesson narration:
Scroll for prep
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DISCUSS:

Why do you think a river flows?

Come up with some ideas!

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DISCUSS: Here’s a map showing real rivers in North America. Do the starting points of the rivers have anything in common? What about where they end?

River Map

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forest


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a place with lots of trees
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pond


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an area of still water, larger than a puddle, but smaller than a lake
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lake


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a large area of water with land all around it
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ocean


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a large area of salt water that covers the Earth
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river


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a long, thin area of water that flows
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flow


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to move along
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float


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to rest on top of water without sinking
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stream


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a small river
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map


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a drawing of a place that shows where things are
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pattern


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something that happens again and again and again in a way that can be predicted
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plains


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large areas of flat land with few trees
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hill


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a high area of land that isn't as tall as a mountain
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mountain


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a high area of land with steep sides
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rain


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water drops that fall from clouds
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model


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a pretend version of something that scientists use when the real thing is too big, small, or complicated to work with
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experiment


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a test used to discover new information about a question
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Image & Video Credits

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Exploration
forest by Image used under license from Shutterstock.com: Aleksey Stemmer
baby owl by Image used under license from Shutterstock.com: Watthano
deer by Image used under license from Shutterstock.com: Pierre Watson
frog by Image used under license from Shutterstock.com: Jay Connors
tadpoles by Aquarium and Terrarium Life
stream by Image used under license from Shutterstock.com: Maksym Darakchi
kid holding bottle by Image used under license from Shutterstock.com: spwidoff
bottle floating by Image used under license from Shutterstock.com: Fotohunt
bottle floating down a river by LittleBigVoice
water bottle by Image used under license from Shutterstock.com: janonkas
ocean by iknowcaleb
tubing on American River by Beyond Limits Adventures
barge by Image used under license from Shutterstock.com: Lacokozyna
wind in tree by Image used under license from Shutterstock.com: Meryll
flowing river by Doug Von Gausig
clear stream by Don Bendickson
kid floating in water by Image used under license from Shutterstock.com: MaszaS
plains by Richard Webb
hills by Image used under license from Shutterstock.com: chaivit chana
mountains by Jon Sullivan
Activity
mountain - aerial view by Image used under license from Shutterstock.com: gagarych
spray bottle by Image used under license from Shutterstock.com: Africa Studio
Lesson narration:

Activity Prep

Print Prep
In this lesson, students develop a model of the earth’s surface and use it to discover an important principle about how rivers work. In the activity, Paper Mountains, students take turns using a spray bottle to make rain fall on paper models of mountains to observe patterns of how water and rivers flow.
Preview activity

Exploration

16 mins

Wrap-Up

4 mins

Extend this lesson

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