Kitchen Sink Volcano: Fun Family Science Experiment
Mike Adamick is a stay-at-home dad who writes for the Adventures in Learning science blog at PBS.org, the San Francisco Chronicle, KQED Radio, Disney's parenting website, Babble, and the Daddy Issues column on Jezebel. His work has also appeared in The New York Times, McSweeney's, Details, NPR, and other media outlets. He is the author of Dad's Book of Awesome Projects, Dad's Book Of Awesome Science Experiments, and Dad's Book of Awesome Recipes from our sister company Simon & Schuster.
Volcano Time!
If you grew up watching endless Brady Bunch reruns you're probably familiar with Peter Brady's volcano—a mud-spewing, steep-sided science project that sent showers of muck and sludge all over Peter's sister, Marsha, and her snooty friends. It was the coolest thing ever.
There's a good chance that this one episode alone launched our love affair with kitchen-sink volcano projects—an experiment so simple that you and your lab partner can most likely do it right now with stuff you already have in the kitchen. All you really need is vinegar, baking soda, and a bottle to mix them in, but it is much cooler to use good ol' fashioned backyard dirt to construct a volcano model around the bottle first and then conduct the experiment.
Either way you do it, this is a science experiment with serious thrills. But it also expertly mimics what happens under the earth's crust to create volcanic eruptions.
Pretty much the same exact thing is happening under the earth right now.
The earth's crust is made up of many sections of super thick shell—65-plus miles thick—called tectonic plates that are always moving, very slowly, over the much, much hotter inner earth. Most of the world's volcanoes are found where two or more of these tectonic plates meet one another. Sometimes those plates shift and sometimes they collide, forming escape routes in the earth's crust for molten rocks and gas, called magma. Much like how the carbon dioxide in your baking soda–vinegar experiment seeks the quickest escape route to relieve pressure, the gases in the underground magma do the same thing before erupting out of a volcano.
Not all eruptions are alike, however. Sometimes the gases in the magma are easily released from the earth's crust and the result is a slow, oozing spread of scorching hot lava. But sometimes the gases stay trapped beneath cooled magma and rock building up pressure until they erupt in violent explosions that can send ash and boulders flying up to 20 miles high. In fact, airplane pilots keep track of volcano activity around the earth, just to be sure they don't fly into clouds of dangerous ash.
- Baking soda
- Vinegar
- A bottle (a good vase with a wide bottom and slender top also works well, but use whatever you can find)
- Red food dye
- String
- Toilet paper
If you're feeling super science-y/crafty, let your lab partner shape a volcano model out of backyard mud and dirt around the bottle. Note: you don't have to do this, but go big or go home, right?
When your volcano model is ready, lift the cap and watch the pouch drop into the lava. It will foam up slowly, mimicking the slow buildup of earth's gases, until the vinegar fully soaks the tissue paper. Then, the fun really begins, as the foam begins to climb the bottle, looking for an escape route. Just stand back, and watch the foam erupt. It's really that easy!
Excerpted from The Dad's Book Of Awesome Science Experiments by Mike Adamick. Copyright © 2014 Adams Media, a division of Simon and Schuster. Used by permission of the publisher. All rights reserved. Photos by Mike Adamick.