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Water at Home
The 3 Ps of Flushing
Water Meters & Leaks
Water Heaters
Cross Connections
Low Water Pressure
Cold Weather Prep
How it Works
Drinking Water
Wastewater
Conservation
Indoors
Outdoors
Environment
The Water Cycle
Climate Change
Wildfires
H2ome Kids
Water Bottle Experiment
Saltwater Experiment
Aquifer in a Cup Experiment
Create an Edible Aquifer
Make an Eco-Friendly Household Cleaner
Stream, River or Lake Clean-up
H2ome
Kids
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Create an Edible Aquifer
H2ome Kids
Overview
Water Bottle Experiment
Saltwater Experiment
Aquifer in a Cup Experiment
Create an Edible Aquifer
Make an Eco-Friendly Household Cleaner
Stream, River or Lake Clean-up
Create an Edible Aquifer
Ages 3+
What You’ll Need
Clear cups
Ice cream scoop
Spoons
Blue/red food coloring
Drinking straw
Vanilla ice cream or fruit sorbet
Clear soda
Small gummy bears, chocolate chips, crushed cookies, breakfast cereal or crushed ice
Variety of colored cake decorations sprinkles or sugars
Directions
Fill your cup one-third of the way full with gummy bears, chocolate chips or crushed ice (this represents the sand/gravel).
Add enough soda to just cover the candy/ice (this represents the water).
Add a layer of ice cream to serve as a “confining layer” over the water-filled aquifer.
Then add more “sand/gravel” on top of the confining layer.
Colored sugar and sprinkles represent soils and should be sprinkled over the top to create a porous top layer.
Add the food coloring to the soda. The food coloring represents contamination.
Can you think of any examples of contamination?
Watch what happens when the contamination is poured on top of the aquifer.
Using a drinking straw, drill a well into the center of the aquifer.
Slowly begin to pump the well by sucking on the straw. This shows a decline in the water table.
Notice how the contaminants get sucked into the well area and end up in the groundwater by leaking through the confining layer.
Now recharge your aquifer by adding more soda. This represents a rain shower.
Gummy bears/chocolate chips/crushed ice = sand and/or gravel
Soda = water
Ice cream = confining layer
Sprinkles/sugar = porous top layer
Food coloring = contamination
Drinking straw = well
What We Learned
The ground holds water called groundwater and some people use a well to pump the water out of the ground for their own use.
There are many layers of groundwater—the unsaturated zone (the dry gummy bears, chocolate chips or crushed ice), the saturated zone (the wet gummy bears, chocolate chips or crushed ice), the porous top layer (the sprinkles/sugar) and any possible contaminants (the food coloring).
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