Cambridge - Science - WB6
Cambridge - Science - WB6
Cambridge - Science - WB6
CAMBRIDGE
E
Primary Science
• Active learning opportunities help learners apply their knowledge
to new contexts
PL
• Three-tiered exercises in every topic help students see and track their
own learning
• Varied exercise types keep learners interested
• Write-in for ease of use
• Answers to all exercises can be found in the accompanying teacher’s resource
For more information on how to access and use your digital resource, Workbook 6
please see inside front cover.
Fiona Baxter & Liz Dilley
M
This resource is endorsed by
Cambridge Assessment International Education Completely Cambridge
✓ P rovides learner support as part of a set of Cambridge University Press works with Cambridge
SA
resources for the Cambridge Primary Science Assessment International Education and experienced
curriculum framework (0097) from 2020 authors to produce high-quality endorsed textbooks
and digital resources that support Cambridge teachers
✓ H
as passed Cambridge International’s and encourage Cambridge learners worldwide.
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To find out more visit cambridge.org/
✓ Developed by subject experts cambridge-international
Original material © Cambridge University Press 2021. This material is not final and is subject to further changes prior to publication.
ISBN_9781108742986.
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CAMBRIDGE
E
Primary Science
PL Workbook 6
Fiona Baxter & Liz Dilley
M
SA
Original material © Cambridge University Press 2021. This material is not final and is subject to further changes prior to publication.
ISBN_9781108742986.
We are working with Cambridge Assessment International Education towards endorsement of this title.
E
PL Imprint
TO FOLLOW …
M
SA
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Contents
Contents
1 The human body
1.1 The circulatory system 2
1.2 The respiratory system 6
E
1.3 The reproductive system 10
1.4 Diseases 14
iii
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Contents
E
6 Light and the Solar System
6.1 Reflection 79
6.2 Refraction
6.3 The Solar System
PL 83
86
M
SA
iv
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How to use this book
E
Focus: these questions help you
to master the basics
v
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E
a
waste products
PL
Use the words in the box to complete the sentences.
You will use some words more than once.
contains .
without to the .
2
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1.1 The circulation system
Practice
3 Circle the letter of the correct answer to each of the following
questions.
a Your heart pumps blood through the body.
This process is called …
A heartbeat
B circulation
E
C pulsing
PL
C heart, blood vessels and blood
A arteries
B veins
C capillaries
3
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1 The human body
Challenge
4 Marcus measured his pulse rate while he was sitting still and then
after doing different types of physical activities. These are his results.
Sitting still 72
E
Playing football 150
Riding a bicycle
PL
a Draw a bar chart of Marcus’s results.
Use a different colour pencil for each activity.
110
M
SA
4
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1.1 The circulation system
E
c Which activity caused the highest pulse rate?
PL
d Is there a measurement that needs to be checked?
If so, which one and why?
M
e Explain how Marcus could make this a fair test.
SA
5
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1 The human body
E
1.2 The respiratory system
Focus
1
nose
ribs
PL
Use the words in the box to complete the sentences.
You will use some words more than once.
blood
carbon dioxide
lungs
oxygen
windpipe
M
We breathe in air through our . The air we
6
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1.2 The respiratory system
Practice
2 The drawing shows the lungs when you breathe out. Make a
drawing to show what happens to the lungs when you breathe
in. Add labels to your drawing to explain what it shows.
E
PL
M
3 Complete the flow diagram using these words to show the
path of oxygen when we breathe in.
SA
7
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1 The human body
Challenge
4 Class 5 measured the pulse rate and breathing rate of
10 people after they had jogged on the spot for three minutes.
Here are their results.
1 30 90
E
2 50 120
3 35 102
7
PL
32
26
40
45
95
100
110
115
M
8 33 98
9 38 106
10 42 112
SA
8
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1.2 The respiratory system
E
PL
M
b Describe the pattern you observe in the results.
SA
9
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1 The human body
E
Focus
1.3 The reproductive system
PL
1 Match each of the words in List 1 with their meanings in List 2.
Draw a line to link each word to its meaning.
List 1 List 2
M
reproduction the baby develops here
10
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1.3 The reproductive system
Practice
2 Draw a circle around the letter of the correct answer to each
of these questions.
a Which change in puberty happens to both boys and girls?
A shoulders and chest get broader
B hips get wider
C the body grows more hair
E
b Which change in puberty happens to boys only?
A increase in height
B voice gets much deeper
C skin becomes more oily
reproductive system?
A ovary
B testes
C uterus
PL
c Which one of the following is not part of the female
M
d Which one of the following is not part of the male
reproductive system?
PLEASE SUPPLY
A oviduct
SOME SORT OF
B sperm duct
SA
INCIDENTAL
C penis VIGNETTE
e Which of the following happens during menstruation?
A male and female sex cells join
B new eggs are formed
C the lining of the uterus pulls away
11
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1 The human body
Challenge
3 A scientist carried out a study with 100 girls to find out the
age at which they started puberty.
This a graph of her findings.
40
35
E
30
Number of girls
25
20
15
10
0
9 10
PL 11 12 13 14 15
M
Age (years)
12
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1.3 The reproductive system
ii 14?
E
d The scientist also measured the mass of the girls at the
start of puberty. This is a summary of her results.
10
11
12
PL 45
45
46
46
M
13 47
14 46
15 45
SA
13
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1 The human body
iii In the past, most girls started puberty at about the age
of 14. Suggest a reason why puberty starts at a
younger age.
E
1.4 Diseases
Focus
1 Mark each one of these statements about diseases as true
or false .
PL
a All infectious diseases are caused by viruses.
14
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1.4 Diseases
Practice
2 On the outline of the human body, draw in the parts and write
labels to describe the different ways the body defends itself
against infectious diseases.
E
PL
M
SA
15
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1 The human body
Challenge
3 Malaria is a serious disease that kills millions of people around
the world each year. The table shows the number of malaria
cases reported at a clinic in Indonesia in one year.
a
ical climate with
E
a s a w a rm trop
Indonesia h
nd a wet
se a so n from A pril to October, a
dry
rch.
on s ea so n from November to Ma
monso
PL
Months of the ye
January to March
April to June
ar
Number of malar
reported
ia cases
780
120
79
M
r
July to Septembe
326
October to
December
SA
16
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1.4 Diseases
E
PL
ii In which months of the year were the most malaria
cases reported?
M
iii In which months of the year were the fewest malaria
cases reported?
17
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2 Materials:
properties and changes
1.1 Properties of substances
E
Focus
1 Different liquids boil at different temperatures.
Explain why this is so.
350
300
PL
2 The graph shows the temperatures at which some liquids boil.
M
250
Temperature (°C)
200
150
SA
water
100
cooking oil
18
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2.1 Properties of substances
E
3 Mark off the following temperatures on the thermometer.
100
PL 90
80
70
60
50
M
40
30
20
SA
10
19
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2 Materials: properties and changes
Practice
4 Look at the pictures of beakers of water in a classroom.
E
A
PL
a Which drawing shows boiling?
20
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2.1 Properties of substances
i Beaker A
ii Beaker B
E
Challenge
Liquid
Water
Olive oil
Vinegar
PL
5 These are the boiling points of three liquids:
Boiling point in °C
100
300
118
M
a Order the liquids from the one with the highest boiling
point to the one with the lowest boiling point.
SA
21
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2 Materials: properties and changes
E
PL
M
SA
d Find out the boiling point of iodine and add it to your graph.
e Why is working with boiling oil more dangerous than
working with boiling water?
22
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2.2 Thermal and electrical conductors
E
Glass bulb
Metal filament
PL Support wires
Wires
M
Screw in
23
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2 Materials: properties and changes
c i Why could your hand got burnt if you stirred hot soup
with a metal spoon?
E
Practice
silver
brass
PL
2 The table shows how well some common metals conduct heat.
A high value means that the metal conducts heat very well.
420
109
M
copper 400
iron 80
stainless steel 15
SA
aluminium 250
24
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2.2 Thermal and electrical conductors
E
PL
b Why do some cooking pots have a copper bottom?
M
SA
c Why do you think cooking pots are not made from silver?
d Why are car radiators which cool the engine made from
copper and brass?
25
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2 Materials: properties and changes
Challenge
3 a Will a block of ice melt quicker in a plastic dish or a metal
dish of the same size? Say why.
E
b If you touched a metal dish that contained an ice cube
and a plastic dish that contained an ice cube, which dish
would feel warmer? Say why.
PL
4 Class 6 asked the question: Is graphite an electrical conductor
M
or not? They carried out an investigation to find out. Each
group tested different lengths of graphite in a circuit and
measured the brightness of a lamp in circuit on scale of 0–5
Averages of their results are shown in the table.
SA
10 1
8 2
2 5
6 4
4 3
12 0
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2.2 Thermal and electrical conductors
independent variable
control variables
E
b Draw a graph of the data
PL
M
SA
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2 Materials: properties and changes
E
f What is the answer to class 6’s question?
Focus
2.3 Reversible changes PL
1 Say whether each of these changes is reversible or irreversible:
M
a melting butter in a hot pan
b baking a cake
SA
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2.3 Reversible changes
E
a Which factor that affects dissolving is being tested?
b
PL
Which factors are the same in both beakers?
M
c Which factors are different in the beakers?
SA
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2 Materials: properties and changes
Practice
3 Mrs Pather poured a cup of tea from the teapot and added two
teaspoons of sugar and stirred the a few times. The tea was
warm, not hot, so she drank it quickly. As she drank the last few
drops, she noticed there was still sugar in the bottom of the cup.
E
PL
a Why was there still sugar at the bottom of the cup?
M
b i What two things could Mrs Pather have done do to
make the all sugar dissolve?
SA
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2.3 Reversible changes
E
c i
PL
Predict what would happen to the sugar if Mrs Pather
forgot to drink her cup of tea and left it standing for
the whole afternoon.
Challenge
4 Zara and Sofia carried out a fair test on the effect of
temperature on the rate of dissolving. These are their results.
20 90
40 40
60 25
80 15
31
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2 Materials: properties and changes
E
PL
M
SA
32
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2.4 Chemical reactions
E
Iron Sulfur Iron sulfide
PL
a Say why this is a chemical reaction.
33
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2 Materials: properties and changes
Practice
3 Circle the correct answer to each of the questions.
a When cooking gas burns in oxygen, carbon dioxide and
water are formed. Which is a reactant?
A water
B oxygen
C heat
E
b When we mix magnesium metal with oxygen, we see a
bright white flame and a white powder. Which is a product?
A the flame
B the powder
C oxygen
PL
c When we mix vinegar and baking soda, carbon dioxide
gas and water are formed. What evidence do we have
that a chemical reaction has taken place?
A We can taste it to check for water.
B We can see a colour change.
PLEASE SUPPLY
SOME SORT OF
M
INCIDENTAL
C We can see gas bubbles form. VIGNETTE
d Eggs rotting is an example of a chemical reaction
because . . .
A a gas that smells bad is formed
SA
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2.4 Chemical reactions
Challenge
4 When plants make food, they use carbon dioxide gas and
water to form oxygen and a sugar called glucose. The picture
shows a plant called pond weed.
Sun
E
a i
PL
Identify the reactants in the reaction described.
M
ii Identify the products in the reaction described.
SA
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2 Materials: properties and changes
E
living things?
e Find out:
PL
d Why is the chemical reaction described important for
M
i the name of the process by which plants make food
PLEASE SUPPLY
SOME SORT OF
INCIDENTAL
VIGNETTE
36
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E
Focus
1 Complete these sentences by writing in the correct words.
Choose words from the box:
minerals
extrusive
slowly
crystals
magma
granite
small
intrusive
quickly
crust
or lava cool
M
down into solid rock. An igneous
37
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3 Rocks, the rock cycle and soil
Practice
2 The diagram shows a section of the Earth’s crust and the
surface of the Earth.
E
a Label the following features: Intrusive igneous rock;
Extrusive rock
PL
M
b Give an example of each type of rock you have labelled.
SA
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3.1 Igneous rocks
Challenge
E
3 Arun and Marcus have gone to an island on holiday. There is
a big mountain in the middle of the island. They are walking
PL
along the beach. The beach is covered with black stones that
39
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3 Rocks, the rock cycle and soil
E
a Heat and ice break up rocks in a process called erosion/
weathering.
b A river erodes/weathers the bottom and sides of its valley.
c
d
e
f
g
PL
The river deposits/transports sediments on the sea bed.
Layers of sediments build up on the sea floor in a process
called accumulation/sedimentation.
Over time the top/bottom layers of sediments become rock.
Sediments in sandstone are more fine grained/coarse
grained than in shale.
Limestone/sandstone is formed of crushed sea shells.
M
h Fossils are only found in sandstone/sedimentary rock.
Practice
2 a How do you know that the rock in the picture
SA
is sedimentary rock?
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3.2 Sedimentary rocks and fossils
E
c Describe how the fossil formed.
Challenge
Read the web page below.
41
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3 Rocks, the rock cycle and soil
continued…
to rest on some rocks. As their bodies rotted in the sun, hyenas and vultures feasted until
only the bones were left behind. When the floodwaters subsided, a waterhole remained
and became a popular place for all the animals in the area.
The sea level rose and flooded the valley once again, submerging the rocks and pools
in salt water. Another layer of sediments was added. This time the sediments were
E
phosphate-rich sand.
For the next five million years this collection of bones lay undisturbed, making the
change from bone to stone.
PL
4 a How old are the fossils in the West Coast Fossil Park?
42
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3.3 Metamorphic rocks and the rock cycle
E
A magma cools and becomes rock
B existing rocks are changed by heat and pressure
C sediments build up on the sea bed.
b Metamorphic rocks are:
A very soft
B in layers PL
C very hard and in layers.
c In the rock cycle, different processes are shown by:
M
A arrows and labels
PLEASE SUPPLY
B pictures SOME SORT OF
C lines. INCIDENTAL
VIGNETTE
2 Draw lines between each rock and the metamorphic rock it
SA
changes into.
Limestone Gneiss
Sandstone Marble
Shale Slate
Granite Quartzite
43
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3 Rocks, the rock cycle and soil
Practice
3 You are given a rock to identify. Use this key to identify the type of rock.
Fill in the spaces in the key.
Is rock crystaline?
Yes No
Rock is
E
Does rock have a
banded appearance?
Yes No
Rock is
PL rocks
on
surface
Rock is
4 Fill in the correct words at A–E on this diagram of the rock cycle.
weathering, A
M
transportation
and deposition
sediment
SA
extrusive
igneous
rock
Earth’s surface
E
burial and
igneous rock burial B
cooling
sedimentary
rock
magma
burial
D deeper burial,
heat and C
rock
44
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3.3 Metamorphic rocks and the rock cycle
Challenge
5 Draw a rock cycle to describe the history of a piece of rock over
the last 350 million years. The rock begins and ends as granite.
Include all these words in your drawing:
E
weathering sandstone cooling erosion
transportation deposition quartzite igneous rock
PL
M
SA
45
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3 Rocks, the rock cycle and soil
3.4 Soil
Focus
1 Complete these sentences. Use the words from the box.
E
The Earth’s crust consists of . Rain and ice
PL
M
List four things you can investigate to describe the soil on the newspaper.
We have done the first one as an example.
a
Colour
SA
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3.4 Soil
Practice
E
4 Sofia and Zara want to plant vegetables on a small plot
of ground.
The soil is hard and dry. The soil is yellowish in colour.
PL
There are no bits of dead leaves or animals in it.
a Describe the texture and colour of the soil.
47
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3 Rocks, the rock cycle and soil
e Write down three ways that Sofia and Zara can change
the composition of the soil to make it more suitable for
growing vegetables.
E
PL
M
Challenge
Read the web pages below.
SA
Organic farming
Organic farming uses environmentally friendly farming methods. These methods
improve the soil and keep humans healthy because there are no chemicals in the food
they produce.
Organic farmers always rotate their crops. This means they do not plant the same crop
on the same soil over and over again. They use compost instead of artificial fertilisers.
Instead of using pesticides they use biological pest control.
48
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3.4 Soil
E
ladybirds, bees and spiders, or lizards,
frogs or birds. Organic farmers plant
flowers near the crops and hedges at
the sides of the field which attract these
natural predators.
PL
For example, aphids are a common pest
because they eat leaves and stems and
fruit. If the farmer makes sure there
are always ladybirds on the farm, the
ladybirds will eat the aphids. It is possible
to buy ladybirds for this purpose! In the
photograph you can see a ladybird eating
M
up all the aphids.
49
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3 Rocks, the rock cycle and soil
d Find out the names of two birds and two animals that are
natural predators of snails.
E
PL
PLEASE SUPPLY
SOME SORT
OF VIGNETTE
M
IMAGE
SA
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E
and energy transfers
Focus
1
PL
Look at the drawing of an ocean food web.
sea turtle
SA
small fish
fish eggs
plant plankton prawn
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4 Food chains and food webs
Practice
Look at the drawing of an ocean food web in the Focus exercise.
E
2 a Identify and draw two other food chains with four links.
PL
b Name the producers in the food web.
ii omnivores
SA
iii carnivores
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4.1 Food chains, food webs and energy transfers
E
Challenge
Read the web page below.
PL
The Namib Desert stretches for over 1000 km along the coast of Namibia in southern
Africa. Very little rain falls there.
Many animals live on the sand dunes of the desert. Ants, beetles and termites eat
seeds and bits of grass that wind carries from the coast.
Antlions eat ants, spiders eat termites, and scorpions eat beetles and spiders.
M
Sunspiders eat scorpions and beetles. Lizards eat spiders, termites, beetles and
sunspiders. The sidewinder adder eats lizards.
53
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4 Food chains and food webs
10
E
b Draw arrows on the drawing to make a food web from the
different food chains you have written.
PL
lizard
sidewinding adder
M
sunspider
spider
scorpion
antlion
SA
ant
termite
beetle
grasses seeds
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4.2 Harm to food chains and food webs
E
4.2 Harm to food chains
and food webs
Focus
PL
1 Find and circle the word in the word search grid that has each
of the following meanings. Circle each word you find and
write the word next to its meaning:
a harmful or poisonous
b to build up or increase
M
c chemicals used by farmers to get rid of insects and other
living things that eat their crops
d the air, land and water around us
e a harmful metal in food chains
SA
p w e r t y n u m o a
e n v i r o n m e n t
s d f g h g f t r n l
t d g u t o x i c e t
i v b n m e l h u j x
c f d t w e i u r m j
i q a h c v b d y p r
d f m j y d d c j a u
e a c c u m u l a t e
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4 Food chains and food webs
E
c Harmful substances in food chains cannot
affect humans.
Practice
3
(4 units)
tadpole
(20 units)
PL
A factory has dumped a harmful chemical into a river.
The drawing shows a food chain in the river and the number
of units of the harmful chemical X in each living thing.
leaf of pond weed fish
(240 units)
heron
(500 units)
M
SA
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4.2 Harm to food chains and food webs
c How many times more time units are there in the fish than
in a pond weed leaf?
E
ii Explain why this is so.
Challenge
PL
M
Read the web page below.
SA
DDT was one of the first and most powerful pesticides developed to kill insects. It was
widely used to control the spread of malaria. Mosquitoes spread the malaria parasite
when they bite people. DDT was also used a lot in the 1960s to spray crops, mostly in
Europe and North America.
Much later, scientists discovered that DDT can move through food chains because
animals’ bodies cannot get rid of it. DDT is stored mainly in body fat. It also remains in
the environment for a long time before it breaks down. Scientists also found that birds
of prey, such as eagles and hawks, which are affected by DDT, lay eggs with very thin
shells. Humans who eat plants or animals that contain DDT are more likely to develop
cancer and other serious diseases.
DDT was banned in the 1980s and is no longer used as a pesticide.
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4 Food chains and food webs
E
c i
PL
ii Why can DDT move through food chains?
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4.2 Harm to food chains and food webs
E
e Why do you think the number of birds of prey in Europe
and North America decreased a lot in the 1960s?
f
PL
Do some research to find out the full name of DDT.
M
PLEASE SUPPLY
SOME SORT OF
SA
INCIDENTAL
VIGNETTE
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5 Forces and
electricity
5.1 Mass and weight
E
Focus
1 a Name the instrument used to measure mass.
PL
b Name the units mass is measured in.
the force of .
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5.1 Mass and weight
Practice
3 Read the following statements about mass and weight.
Mark each statement as true ( ) or false ( ).
a Mass and weight are the same.
b We measure mass in kilograms.
c We measure weight in Newtons.
E
d Weight is the amount of matter in an object.
Object
Brick
Bag of books
Bag of potatoes
PL
Remember to include the correct units for each measurement.
Mass
10
Weight
25
M
Bag of cement 400
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5 Forces and electricity
Challenge
6 a What is this instrument called? N
50
40
30
10
E
c What is the mass of the bag of oranges?
PL
Mr Large has a mass of 90 kg on Earth. He travels to Planet
Zogg where the gravity is only half as strong as it is on Earth.
What will Mr Large’s weight be on Planet Zogg?
Explain your answer.
M
SA
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5.2 The effects of forces
E
b
PL
Arun cracks an egg into a bowl.
M
SA
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5 Forces and electricity
E
BEEHIVE
ILLUSTRATION
TO CORRECT
d
PL
Marcus hits a tennis ball back to Arun.
M
SA
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5.2 The effects of forces
Practice
2 Write down alongside each picture how the soccer ball is
affected by forces applied to it.
E
b
PL
M
SA
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5 Forces and electricity
E
PL
M
d
SA
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5.2 The effects of forces
E
Challenge PL
4 a You have to demonstrate five different effects of forces.
You are given a space on the floor next to a wall, a tennis
ball and a strip of sandpaper.
M
Fill in the actions you would do and the effect of the force
on the tennis ball in the table below.
The first one is done as an example.
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5 Forces and electricity
E
Focus
1
5.3 Floating and sinking
PL
Complete the sentences by filling in the correct words from
M
the box.
by .
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5.3 Floating and sinking
E
Practice
Read the web page below.
PL
M
Sofia and Zara are doing an investigation to see how mass affects floating and
sinking.
They have a glass container of water. They have made a ‘raft’ out of a square piece of
flat polystyrene which floats on the surface. They have a balance.
SA
‘Let’s try putting coins on the raft and see how many we put on before the raft sinks,’
says Zara.
Sofia puts a pile of different coins on the table. ‘We have to use the same sized coins
– let’s sort them out.’
Zara puts a coin on the balance. Each coin has a mass of 5 g.
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5 Forces and electricity
E
PL
b Why did the polystyrene ‘raft’ float on the water?
d Suggest how the girls could have changed the raft and
put more coins on it before it sank.
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5.3 Floating and sinking
E
PL
M
SA
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5 Forces and electricity
Challenge
Submarines
Submarines are able
to float or sink. How
Look at the cut sectio do they manage to do
ns of a submarine in this?
the pictures:
E
vents
outer hull
inner hull
ballast tanks
opening
PL
M
The hull of the submar
ine has two layers. In
spaces. These are ca between the layers th
lled the ballast tanks. ere are big storage
tanks are filled with ai W he n th e su bmarine is floating, th
r. This makes the tota e ballast
mass of the water it l m as s of th e su bm ar
displaces, so the subm in e less than the
arine floats.
SA
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5.3 Floating and sinking
4 a Explain how filling the ballast tanks with water causes the
submarine to sink.
E
b Draw a section of the submarine, like the ones above,
but when it is completely submerged. Show the forces
involved with arrows.
PL
5 Find out the answer to each of the following questions.
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5 Forces and electricity
E
Component Symbol
PL
M
SA
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5.4 Different circuits and circuit diagrams
Practice
2
E
a List the components in this circuit.
PL
b Will the buzzer come on? Explain why or why not.
M
3 Look at the two circuits, A and B.
A B
+
3V
SA
+
3V
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5 Forces and electricity
E
c Draw circuit diagrams for circuits A and B.
PL
M
Challenge
SA
1 2 3 1
2
A B C
4 a Which circuits are parallel circuits and which are
series circuits?
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5.4 Different circuits and circuit diagrams
E
PL
d In circuit A, which lamp or lamps will not light up?
Explain your answer.
M
e In circuit A, what would happen if you opened both
the switches?
SA
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E
Focus
1 The diagrams A–D show light reflecting off plane mirrors.
Complete each of the diagrams by adding the missing ray.
PL
Measure angles with a protractor.
Label all the rays as the incident ray or the reflected ray.
A B
M
SA
C D
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6.1 Reflection
Practice
2 Diagrams A–F show light reflecting off plane mirrors.
A B
E
C
PL D
M
E F
SA
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6 Light and the Solar System
E
PL
M
SA
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6.1 Reflection
Challenge
E
BEEHIVE
ILLUSTRATION
PL
TO CORRECT
M
3 a What is Zara using the periscope for?
SA
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6 Light and the Solar System
E
What do you think he is
b
using the periscope for?
PL
Suggest other ways in which periscopes are useful.
M
SA
6.2 Refraction
Focus
1 Explain why the pencil in the picture appears to be bent.
Cross out the incorrect alternatives in the sentences below.
The pencil is bent because of reflection/refraction.
A ray of light passes from the pencil through the water/air to
the glass. The ray bends/straightens when it passes through
the glass to the air/water and into our eyes.
We see the bent pencil as a trick/optical illusion.
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6.2 Refraction
E
A convex lens makes things look bigger/smaller because light
rays bend inwards/outwards as they leave the lens.
Practice
PL
M
BEEHIVE
ILLUSTRATION
TO CORRECT
SA
4 Draw in the light ray on the diagram above to show how light
travels from the pencil to Marcus. Draw a dotted line to show
the optical illusion that Marcus sees.
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6 Light and the Solar System
White light
E
a What is the triangular glass object?
PL
c Label the colours on the diagram.
b Explain why.
M
SA
Challenge
Read the web page below.
Have you ever read a story or seen a movie where someone is trying to walk across a
desert and is desperate for water? They keep seeing water in the distance only to find it
is just more sand.
Look at the photograph taken in the Namib desert. It really looks as though the thorn
trees are reflected in a lake of water … but it is just sand.
This is a mirage and it is an optical illusion.
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6.2 Refraction
E
7
PL
Use the internet or reference books to find out how a mirage
happens.
M
SA
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6 Light and the Solar System
E
PL
M
SA
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6.3 The Solar System
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
E
shapes at different times?
b How long does it take for the Moon to make this movement?
PL
c Between which numbers is the Moon waning?
Practice
M
3
SA
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6 Light and the Solar System
E
d Which planet has the shortest year? Explain why.
4
system accurately? PL
e Why does this diagram not show the solar
M
SA
Earth
On the diagram:
a Draw and label the Sun.
b Label the eight phases of the Moon.
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6.3 The Solar System
Challenge
Read the web page below.
E
often called ‘the red planet’ – the red colour is due
to iron in the rocks. Mars’ atmosphere consists mainly
of carbon dioxide. In winter temperatures fall to
–125 °C. On parts of Earth temperatures drop to
−50 °C.
Spacecraft that have landed on the surface of Mars reported a rocky surface with frequent dust
storms and no life.
Jupiter is composed almost entirely of gases
M
such as hydrogen and helium – it is sometimes
called a ‘gas giant’. The temperature is about
−153 °C. Jupiter is 800 million km away from
the Sun. It takes 12 Earth years to orbit the
Sun.
SA
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6 Light and the Solar System
E
Time taken to make one orbit
round the Sun
Number of moons
PL
Lowest temperature in winter
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6.3 The Solar System
E
6 The four biggest moons of Jupiter are often called the
‘Galilean Moons’ after the astronomer Galileo Galilei. Find out
PL
more about Galileo and answer these questions.
a Where and when was Galileo born?
b How did Galileo manage to find out more about the planets?
M
c What else, besides the four biggest moons of Jupiter, did
Galileo identify for the first time in the Solar System?
SA
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