Energy in a Partially Frozen River
When a river freezes over, the water in the middle is sometimes still running.
Location
Banner Lake, Iowa
Driving Question
How does the water in a frozen river continue to flow?
Probing Questions
- Why do you think the water keeps running in the middle?
- How cold do you think it has to get for it to freeze in the middle?
- Do you think the size of the river matters?
- How do you think the river water gets its speed to move?
- Do you think thermal energy has anything to do with the river not freezing?
- Do you think animals can survive under the ice?
Classroom Suggestions
Students could:
- Go for a hike and see a frozen body of water.
- Try to create a simulation of a frozen body of water. What part of the water freezes first?
- Research temperatures that affect freezing water.
- Draw a picture of frozen ice particles and compare it to a picture of moving water particles.
Resources
- Science Buddies | Build a River Model: Create a model and then take it outside (if it is winter time) to see how long it takes to freeze. Does water in the middle keep moving? What part of the river freezes first. Include or create a way to have a waterfall so the energy keeps moving the water. Use a hose?
- Let's See What Happens | Does Moving Water Freeze?: An experiment done with moving water vs. stationary water. Which one freezes first?
- Inspire Education | The Journey of a River: This short video describes how a river begins. It shows how a river gets its speed and from the beginning of the river to the end.
Iowa Core Alignment
4-PS3-1:Use evidence to construct an explanation relating the speed of an object to the energy of that object
Credit Info
Phenomena submitted by Valorie Grundmeier.