Grades:
1-6
Objective:
Describe and label the anatomy of a tree and understand how to roughly determine the age of a tree.
Method:
Students will draw and label their own diagram of a tree and will count the growth rings in a piece of wood to determine the age of a real tree.
Materials:
- One large cross-section of wood with visible growth rings
- One small cross-section of wood with visible growth rings for every two or three students in the class
- Paper tags, one for each small piece of wood
- Diagram of Tree Anatomy
- Diagram of Tree Anatomy Answer Key
- White Paper
- Crayons or Colored Pencils
Time:
- Preparation Time: : 60 minutes (depends on how many wood cross-sections you need)
- Class Time: 60 minutes
Procedure:
- Before class, number each piece of wood and mark it with a paper tag. Count the growth rings in each piece of wood and record its number and age on a piece of paper. (Note: If all your sections are from the same tree trunk, they should all have the same number of growth rings).
- Before class, number each piece of wood and mark it with a paper tag. Count the growth rings in each piece of wood and record its number and age on a piece of paper. (Note: If all your sections are from the same tree trunk, they should all have the same number of growth rings).
- At the beginning of class, explain that the people can determine the age of a tree by counting its growth rings. Demonstrate using the larger piece of wood.
- Break the students into groups of two or three. Give each group a piece of wood.
- Ask students to count the growth rings on their piece of wood to determine the wood’s age.
- Ask students to use the Diagram of Tree Anatomy to draw their own tree and label its parts, including xylem, phloem, stem, leaves, etc.
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- Discuss the parts of the tree that people use.
- What parts of the tree do people use?
- What parts do people not use?
- What parts do people not use?
- Why do think people do not use those parts?
Questions to ask: - Prompt a class discussion of sawmills.
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- Prompt a class discussion of sawmills.
- What happens in sawmills?
- How do sawmills operate?
- What do you know about sawmills that operated one hundred years ago?
- What more would you like to know about sawmills?
Questions to ask: -
- Ask the following questions after finishing the experiment:
- Where did the rain come from?
- Where did the rain go?
- Is the dirt damp?
- What happened to the ice? Where is it now?
- Can you identify all of the parts of the water cycle in this experiment? The parts of the water cycle are noted in parenthesis above.
- Explain that the water cycle helps people in many ways. Water was an important form of power to mills like that at Hanford Mills Museum.
Assessment:
- Participation in experiment
- Tree diagram
NYS Learning Standards:
- ELA Standard 1
- Math, Science and Tech. Standard 4
Vocabulary & Spelling Words:
Bark – n. the outside covering of the trunks, branches, and roots of woody plants.
Branch – n. a woody part of a tree or bush that grows out from the trunk.
Cambium – n. the thin layer between the inner bark (phloem) and wood of a tree. It helps both grow.
Growth Rings – n. the layer of wood made by a tree during a single year; annual ring. It is possible to figure out the age of a tree that has fallen or has been cut down by counting its rings.
Heartwood – n. the center part or past growth of a tree.
Leaf – n. one of the usually green, flat parts of a plant or tree that grows from the stem or branch.
Lumber – n. logs cut into boards or beams for use in building.
Phloem – n. the layer of the trunk through which the tree’s food flows. It is located between the outer bark and the cambium. It is also known as the “inner bark”.
Root – n. the part of a plant that usually grows underground, absorbs water and food, and attaches the plant to the soil.
Sapwood – n. the newer layers of wood between the bark and the heartwood that conduct water and sap in a tree. A new layer is added each year, forming growth rings.
Sawdust – n. the tiny bits of wood that fall away when wood is sawed.
Shavings – n. very thin slices or shaved-off pieces, as of wood.
Slabwood – n. the rounded, bark covered pieces of wood left over after a log is sawed into lumber.
Tree – n. a woody plant that has a long main trunk and many branches.
Trunk – n. the main stem of a tree.