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My own personal favorite is to use a dissecting microscope to inspect
samples. Whether video or just the hardware. The reason I advocate
a dissecting scope is for the low power - to be able to see things
that are just hinted at in our normal vision.
I was involved in the development of an exhibit on Pompeii last year,
so I would definitely include volcanos in your oeurve - there are two
things that never go out of style for kids - volcanos and
dinosaurs....Its fairly easy to make an interesting and reliable
device to show the vibrations when one jumps up and down near it.
Stratigraphy - we did a 12 foot high 'section' through Pompeii.
Pretty fun, pretty easy, and pretty impressive....to show the strata
and how the ejecta changed over time. would obviously have relavance
to mining (stratigraphy, that is...)
On Mar 18, 2008, at 9:31 AM, David Smith wrote:
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> On Tue, Mar 18, 2008 at 3:28 AM, Regan Forrest
> <[log in to unmask]>
> wrote:
>
>> ISEN-ASTC-L is a service of the Association of Science-Technology
>> Centers
>> Incorporated, a worldwide network of science museums and related
>> institutions.
>>
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>
>
>
>>
>> Hi all,
>>
>>
>> I'm on a hunt for interactive exhibits about geology and / or
>> mining, in a
>> very general sense.
>>
>>
> I like Aeolian Landscape and Tectonic Basin, both from the
> Exploratorium
>
> Erosion tables are also very engaging.
>
> I helped develop an interactive workstation, Stories in Stone, here
> at the
> Da Vinci Sciecne Center that is designed to engage visitors in
> inquiry about
> earth materials, specifically about how to decipher the history of
> a rock
> from its texture and composition. Feel free to contact me off-list
> if you
> want more details.
>
> Dave Smith, geologist
>
> --
> David L. Smith
> Da Vinci Science Center
> Allentown, PA
> http://www.davinci-center.org
>
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