This is the material through which electricity easily flows, such as copper or aluminum.
What is a conductor?
An organism that feeds on both plant and animal material.
What is an omnivore?
A force holding objects still even as you're pushing.
What is static friction?
An educated guess.
What is a hypothesis?
The largest planet in our Solar system.
What is Jupiter?
This is the buildup of electric charges on the surface of a carpet as you rub your feet on it.
What is static electricity?
All living organisms in an ecosystem.
What is a community?
The gravitational pull of planet Earth.
What is 9.8?
The variable that is under the control of the experimenters.
What is the independent variable?
The chemical symbol for iron.
What is Fe?
This is the term for the opposition to the flow of electric current, measured in ohms.
What is resistance?
Photosynthesising organisms form the foundation of this layer of the ecological pyramid.
What are producers?
This law states that "For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction."
What is Newton's third law?
These are factors in an experiment that must be kept the same to ensure a fair test.
What are controlled variables?
The number of bones found in an adult human body.
What is 206?
This type of circuit has more than one path for electricity to flow through.
What is a parallel circuit?
The heritable trait that gives you the advantage due to natural selection.
What is an adaptation?
The tendency of objects to do nothing or to remain unchanged.
What is inertia?
The evaluation of your hypothesis if one part of the prediction is correct, while another is not.
What is partially supported?
The father of natural selection
Who is (Charles) Darwin?
This unit is used to measure electric current, the flow of electric charge.
What is an ampere (or amp)?
This type of relationship between two organisms benefits one organism while the other is neither helped nor harmed.
What is commensalism?
According to Newton’s First Law, an object at rest stays at rest, and an object in motion stays in motion, unless acted on by this.
What is an unbalanced force?
This term describes how consistent the results of an experiment are when repeated under the same conditions.
What is reliability?
Australia went to "war" with this animal in 1932?
Who is the emu?
What is an emu?