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Published byCole Klein Modified over 11 years ago
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MIXTURES
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Have you ever made a mixture? How do you make a mixture? What type of mixture did you make? Did you know that there is more to a mixture than what you actually see? Did you know there are two types of mixtures?
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Name The Mixture
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Vanilla Ice Cream Vanilla ice cream, milk and koolaid are all examples of homogeneous mixtures.
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Toy Box A toy box, a tool box and a tossed salad are all examples of a heterogeneous mixture.
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Mixtures A mixture is when two or more substances (elements or compounds) come together but do not combine to make a new substance.
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Two types of mixtures. Homogenous Heterogeneous
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A homogenous mixture is a mixture that is the same throughout. A heterogeneous mixture is a mixture that have larger parts and is different from each others.
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In a homogenous mixture the different parts cannot be seen. In a heterogeneous mixture the different parts can be seen.
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Homogenous Mixture Because the different parts cannot be seen it is sometimes difficult to determine if a mixture is a homogenous mixture. An example of a homogenous mixture would be milk, a brass lamp, etc.
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Example:
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Heterogeneous Mixture Because the parts are large and can be seen it is easy to identify a heterogeneous mixture. An example of a heterogeneous mixture is a garden salad, a tool box with various tools.
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Example:
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Two points to remember. Homo means same. A Homogenous mixture will be the same throughout. Hetero means different. A Heterogeneous mixture will be different throughout.
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Resources Ice cream (azlina.net) Kool-aid-man (the dailybite.wordpress.com) Milk & cream (caswells- moms.com) Toybox (theswankypup.blogspot.com)
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Resources continued… Toolbox(carpefactum.typepad.c om/…/tool box.jpg) Tossed salad (www.istockphoto.com/file- thumbview-approve/35...
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