The second slide we looked at was Planaria, a flat worm. It looked like a long yellow streak with dots inside. The third slide was Hydra (budding), and this looked a hand with four fingers.
Tuesday, January 25, 2011
Magnifying a Drop of Water
I have a microscope at home which I decided to put to good use. Mom and I bought some slides and decided to take a look at them through the microscope. These were from a Water Life slide set.

The first slide we looked at was Paramecium caudatum. At the highest magnification (x400) it looked like a yellowish, greenish pod. According to my book, A World in a Drop of Water: Exploring with a Microscope by Alvin Silverstein and
Virginia Silverstein, it is supposed to look like a slipper. At the x100 and x40 magnifications, it looked like purple streaks (it was stained).
The second slide we looked at was Planaria, a flat worm. It looked like a long yellow streak with dots inside. The third slide was Hydra (budding), and this looked a hand with four fingers.
The second slide we looked at was Planaria, a flat worm. It looked like a long yellow streak with dots inside. The third slide was Hydra (budding), and this looked a hand with four fingers.
Labels:
science
Book Review: Haroun and the Sea of Stories
Haroun is a child of a storyteller. Haroun's mother runs away with another man. After his mother ran away, Haroun's father suddenly ran out of stories to tell. To cheer his father up, Haroun asks a coach driver to bring his father to the Valley of K. The valley's view will make anyone who sees it happy. After a while, Haroun finds out that his father's subscription of Story Water has run out and he tries to renew it.
Haroun is helped by Butt and Iff, a hoopoe (a kind of bird) and a water genie, respectively. Haroun has to experience a lot of adventures in order to achieve his goal.
It's a happy ending! In order to fill in all the missing bits like why did Haroun's mother run away, you'll have to read the book yourself. I strongly recommend this for all ages.
Salman Rushdie wrote this book for his son Zafar. There's a companion book called Luka and the Fire of Life
Labels:
reading
Thursday, January 20, 2011
Book Review: Augustine Came To Kent
Pope Gregory sends Abbot Augustine from Rome to Kent in Britain to spread the word about Christianity and God. In the book, Augustine and his followers (inluding Wolf and his father, Wolfstan) face bad weather and storms on their way. When they reach the shores of Kent, they are greeted by villagers led by Cyneog. Cyneog's daughter Fritha and Wolf become friends (and later, husband and wife).
In our Story of the World audiobook
, we heard that Pope Gregory calls two Anglo Saxon boys "angels". In this book, apparently, Wolfstan is one of the boys. So he is actually from England. Wolfstan finds his old home and is welcomed by Sigwolf, the leader of the village and his kinsmen.
Also, Augustine's mission is a success because King Ethelbert and many others agree to be baptized and leave their old gods.
My Mom assigned this book for me to read because it has some historical bits I don't know about. It's a book I would not have chosen by myself to read because the story was not written in a funny way.
If you like this book, please comment.
Monday, January 3, 2011
Books I Read Today
Hanuman, based on Valmiki's Ramayana
This book gives an accurate picture of Hanuman's story and is very nice for light reading. Hanuman is a monkey who helps Rama to get his wife, Sita, back from the clutches of Ravana and his city, Lanka. Hanuman does this by using his powers to grow, jump and fly. It's a slim book with easy vocabulary and amazing pictures.
How to Train Your Dragon Book 1 by Cressida Cowell
It's an extremely funny story about Hiccup Horrendous Haddock III's (also known as Hiccup) adventures in capturing and training a dragon known as Toothless. I enjoyed it because of the humorous notebook drawings and the various methods Hiccup tries to train his dragon. The book is very different from the movie
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