Soil is a
Filter (by Dr. Dirt)
Objectives:
Students will discover that soils physically and
chemically filter impurities out of water.
Students will discover the role of soil in having
good drinking water.
Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills,
K-8
Adobe *.pdf file
TEKS:
Grade 1: 112.3.b7A, 10 A-C
Grade 2: 112.4.b7A, 10 A&B
Grade 3: 112.5.b2 A-E, 3 A&C, 4 A&B, 7B, 11B
Grade 4: 112.6.b2 A-E, 3 A&C, 4 A&B, 11A
Grade 5: 112.7.b2 A-E, 3 A&C, 4 A&B, 6B
Grade 6: 112.22.b2 A-E, 3 A&C, 4 A&B, 14B
Grade 7: 112.23.b2 A-E, 3 A&C, 4 A&B (rate of
water flow), 8A
Grade 8: 112.24.b2 A-E, 3 A&C, 4 A&B, 8B, 12C, 14C
Int Phys Chem: 112.42c2 A-D, 3 A&C, 4B, 9A
Env Sys: 112.44c2 A-D, 5 B&F
Chem 112.45c2 A-E
Phys: 112.47c2 A-F
Introduction:
Asking questions is a good way to find answers (and to learn
something).
- What is a filter? (Show a coffee filter or a tea bag
to
aid discussion.)
- Can soil be a filter?
- Do all soils work the same?
Hypothesis:
Briefly explain experiment.
Have students make hypothesis and complete table.
What will happen to the dirty water "floaties"?
What color will come out the bottom? |
Materials and
Preparation:
3 oz and 5 oz solo cups (Put 3-5 holes in bottom of 5 oz cup. A
toothpick works well.). The 5 oz cup fits inside 3 oz cup, the
put
the toothpick inside, between the cups.
play sand
fine soil
grape Kool-aid
other colors, e.g., green, red, orange, yellow food coloring
"floaties"
The results are more dramatic if the play sand has been sieved
to
remove the smaller particles. If you do not have soil sieves, you
can use a colander or a spaghetti strainer if the holes are
small. Another
material that makes a good sieve is screening. A fine screen
attached
to a small frame makes an excellent sieve.
This series of videos demonstrates the process and results with two
soils: a sand and a clay loam. A clay loam is a fine-textured soil.
This example also has about 2% soil organic matter, which makes the
soil dark. Brief video clips are available in Quicktime
(QT) or RealPlayer
(RP) formats. If neither is available on your computer, click the name
above to download them.
|
Sand added:
|
Clay loam
added:
|
Grape drink
added to
sand:
|
Grape drink
added to
clay loam:
|
Results:
|
| QT, RP
|
QT, RP
|
QT, RP
Notice the liquid flows rapidly
through the sand, and the leachate is essentially the same color as the
source. Sand particles are large, creating large pores that allow rapid
water movement.
|
QT, RP
Notice the wetting of the clay
loam occurs slowly, and that no leachate is observed from the bottom of
the funnel during the clip. Clay loam soils are fine-textured, have
smaller pores, hold more water than sands, and restrict water flow
rates.
|
QT, RP
Contrast the colors. The
leachate from the sand is not quite as dark as the grape drink. The
leachate is still flowing from the clay loam, and is much lighter in
color.
|
Talking
points: Physics (How things work) is the reason the water flows faster
through the sand than through the clay loam.
Chemistry (How things are made) is the reason the leachates are
different colors. The clay particles have a negative charge. The
organic matter has both negative and positive charges. The organic dyes
in grape drink have opposite charges: Blue is positive, red is
negative. Since opposites attract, the blue dye is attracted to the
clay particles, while the red dye is allowed to pass through the soil.
Nitrates (and other soil chemical compounds) are anions (have negative
charges), and so move through the soil with water. Other compounds,
like ammonium and potassium, are cations (have positive charges), and
so tend to be held in the soil.
|
Methods:
We will use two soils, a sand by itself, and a sand with topsoil on
top. (The sand keeps the topsoil in the cup.) Sand has
large, rough particles. Topsoil is a mixture of particle sizes.
Sand
| I |
A |
Take a 5 oz cup with holes in the bottom and fill it
half
full
of sand. |
|
B |
Put it inside the 3 oz cup. Put a toothpick between the
cups
so
that air can escape from the bottom cup. |
|
C |
Pour some of the dirty water into the top cup |
|
|
Photo taken by
Perry Hoag, at the Saturday
Science Program at the Don Harrington Discovery Center, Amarillo, TX
|
| Observe: |
What happens to the things floating in the water? |
| Record: |
Write your observations in the table. |
| II |
A |
Pour out the water in the bottom cup. |
|
B |
Pour some of the grape Kool-aid into the top cup. |
| Observe: |
What color is the Kool-aid that goes into the
cup?
What color is the water that collects in the bottom cup? |
| Record: |
Write your observations in the table. |
Topsoil
| III |
A |
Put a layer of sand the width of your pointer finger in
the
bottom of the 5 oz cup. (It has holes in it.) |
|
B |
Add topsoil until the cup is half full. |
|
C |
Put the 5 oz cup into the 3 oz cup. |
|
D |
Pour some of the grape Kool-aid into the top cup. |
| Observe: |
What color is the Kool-aid that goes into the
cup?
What color is the water that collects in the bottom cup? |
| Record: |
Write your observations in the table. |
| Compare: |
Is the water in the bottom cup the same color for both
soils? |
| Record: |
Write your observations in the table. |
- The photo shows the results of a filtering exercise.
- The upside-down cup on the left shows the holes in
the
bottom.
- To the right of that is a cup with soil inside the
smaller
cup. The toothpick is barely visible between the cups on the right side.
- The next four cups across the top contain the
leachate (the
water
that ran through the soil) for the soils in the containers below them.
- The soils vary in color from gray to red to brown to
the
light brown sand on the right.
- The color of the water in the bottom cup ranges from
purple
(about
the same color as the grape drink began), to bright pink,, to almost
colorless,
to a murky red.
- The coffee filter is given to the students to take
home to
remind them that soil is a filter.
- Discussion points: Remember that blue and red make
purple.
The smallest soil particles (clays) have a negative charge. Opposite
charges attract and like charges repel. In all cases the red dye passes
through the soil, so it must have a like charge as the soil (negative).
The blue dye is
retained in three of the soils, so it must have an opposite charge
(positive). In this case, the soil with the purple leachate had very
good structure, and
the Kool-aid probably went through the pores and did not mix much with
the
soil.
|
|
So
what?
(Application)
- Soil naturally filters water that falls as rain and goes
into
rivers.
- Soil filters many chemicals out of water just like it did
the
grape Kool-aid.
- These same techniques are used to purify waste water that
comes
from houses, cities, industry, and large animal feeding operations.
A healthy soil
is
important for good drinking water.
Try this at home (with your parent's permission or
assistance)!
Use different colors of water (green, red, orange,
or others) using other Kool-aid flavors or food coloring.
Updated 06-30-2005.
Copyright
2005. Clay Robinson, Ph.D., as to
all resources: Materials may not be reproduced without Dr. Robinson's
written consent. Students are prohibited from selling (or being paid
for taking) notes or webpages during this course to or by any person or
commercial firm without the express written permission of the developer
of these pages. |