1. Have an adult help in the kitchen with the stove. Make the fudge mix as written on the package. As the fudge begins to boil, pour half of it into a baking dish.
2. Begin to stir the other half of the fudge mix for ten minutes as it begins to cool down. Pour this fudge that is cooled into the second baking dish.
Now, explore! Observe the consistency of the mixtures... how it moves as you pour, what it looks like as you move the pan around as you pour, and what happens the surface of the baking pans. Now imagine Hawaii being covered with this mixture of "lava."
Two types of lava flow from volcanoes, they are named from the Hawaiian language. The fudge that was put in the first pan, as it was hot, flowed smoothly and formed a flat surface. This is similar to the texture of pahoehoe lava. Pahoehoe (pronounced pa-hoy-hoy) lava can form lava tubes and an undersea formation called pillow lava. The other fudge that was cooled formed lumps and makes a lumpy surface in the pan. This has an appearance like aa lava. Aa (pronounced Ah-Ah) lava produces sharp and twisted rocks that are difficult to walk on.
Earth & Space Sciences: 3.1, 3.2
OSIC Codes: Y2002.CSC.S01.G03-05.BB.L03.I01; Y2002.CSC.S01.G03-05.BB.L03.I02