1 / 18

How Scientists Work

How Scientists Work. Have you ever noticed what happens to food that is left in an open trash can for a few days in summer? Creatures that look like worms appear on the discarded food. These creatures are called maggots.

fchristy
Download Presentation

How Scientists Work

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. How Scientists Work • Have you ever noticed what happens to food that is left in an open trash can for a few days in summer? • Creatures that look like worms appear on the discarded food. • These creatures are called maggots. • For thousands of years people had been observing maggots. They seemed to suddenly appear out of nowhere. • Where do they come from?

  2. Observations & Experimentation • People's ideas about where some living things come from have changed over the centuries. • Exploring this change can help show how science works. • Remember that what might seem obvious today was not so obvious thousands of years ago. • Today, we use the Scientific Method to prove or disprove our theories!

  3. Aristotle • The Greek philosopher Aristotle made and recorded his observations about the natural world over 2000 years ago! • He lived from 384 – 322 BC • Aristotle produced his own classification of life, placing living things into groups according to features they had in common. • He called each of these groups a genus

  4. Aristotle… • During and after his lifetime, people thought that special “supernatural” forces brought living things into being from nonliving material. • He believed there were 5 essential elements: • Fire, Water, Earth, Air… and “Aether” (Heaven) • Aristotle thought that the spark for life in this world came from the heavens and he began to list ways to “bring this spark of life” to life! • He wrote down “recipes” to produce life.

  5. Recipe for Bees

  6. One for Mice….

  7. Even One for Frogs! • The Nile River floods every year. • The mud becomes rich and fertile. • Millions of frogs appeared on the banks of the river. Any idea where the Nile River is?

  8. Asking Questions.... • For many years, it appeared that living things could just suddenly appear out of nowhere: • Maggots showed up on meat; • Mice were found on grain; • Beetles turned up on cow dung (poop) • People wondered how this happened • They were, in their own everyday way, identifying a problem to be solved by asking a question: • How do new living things, or organisms, come into being?

  9. Taking a guess... • For centuries, people accepted the idea that some life somehow “arose” from nonliving matter • The maggots “arose” from the meat, the mice from the grain, and the beetles from the poop • Maggots on Meat • People even gave a name to the idea that life could arise from nonliving matter: • Spontaneous generation

  10. Francesco Redi • In 1668, Francesco Redi, an Italian physician, proposed a different hypothesis for the appearance of maggots. • Redi observed that maggots appeared on meat a few days after flies were present. • He considered it likely that the flies laid eggs too small for people to see.

  11. Francesco Redi • Redi did not believe in Spontaneous Generation. • He was proposing a new hypothesis: • Flies produce maggots. • Redi's next step was to test his hypothesis.

  12. Redi's Hypothesis • Redi made a prediction that keeping flies away from rotting meat would prevent the appearance of maggots. • To test this hypothesis, he set up an experiment:

  13. Good Science! • Redi created a Controlled Experiment. • He used the same type of meat, the same glass jars, kept them in the same environment (sunlight, temperature). • He only changed ONE thing… • How the jars were covered • But, still… not everyone believed him! I mean, there were still some things that couldn’t be explained…

  14. Microscopes… • Before the invention of microscopes, people did not realize that there are living organisms which the human eye cannot see! • Microbes • We will learn more about microscopes later!

  15. Louis Pasteur • It wasn’t until Louis Pasteur, who lived from 1822 – 1895, that the world became convinced that Spontaneous Generation was totally incorrect! • Pasteur provided the evidence which finally convinced the scientific world that microbes could not spontaneously generate. • Bill Nye Spontaneous Generation

  16. Louis Pasteur & Microbes • Pasteur proved that there are microbes present in the air around us • He set up a controlled experiment

  17. Pasteurization • Pasteur showed that no microbes ever grew in solutions which had been sterilized by heating, provided the air above the solutions was also sterilized. • If unsterilized air was allowed to come in contact with the solutions, microbes began growing in the solutions. • The microbes were present in the unheated air. • We use Pasteurization today to prevent microbes from causing food to spoil.

  18. We’re Still Learning… • We continue to learn new things and build on our past knowledge • We use the Scientific Method… • It is a series of steps – a process – that allows us to prove or disprove a hypothesis.

More Related