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Experiment: Make a Fruit Mumm ... You can make a mummy out of a slice of fruit by covering it with a desiccant and letting it draw the water out. You will be using a mixture of baking soda and salt as the desiccant. These are some of the substances in natron.
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www.unmuseum.org/exmum.htm
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As we are lacking in a dead body (any volunteers?!) we're going to use a piece of fruit. This task will be your most challenging, so be prepared! Here's what you need to do: ... The ingredients on your list will be provided for you at a designated time next week. You will then mummify your fruit.
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www.teachnet.ie/stpats/2003/ancient_egypt_2/third_task....
www.teachnet.ie/stpats/2003/ancient_egypt_2/third_task.htm
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It also tells you how to mummify fruit! Mummies of the world; This site gives a clear definition of what a mummy is before it says anything else, which I think is good for children trying to find out more. It also gives a compact description of how and why Egyptian mummies were created.
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home.att.net/~a.barletta/egypt.htm
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QC WC Activity 3: Mummify Fruit Mummify fruit by following the directions from Newton's Apple. Click Mummies and look for the activity "Salt of the Earth." FC AC Activity 4: Create a Mummy Make a miniature mummy with aluminum foil, gauze strips, masking tape, newspaper, scrap cardboard, and white glue.
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www.heartofwisdom.com/Acrobat/Egypt%20Mummies.pdf
www.heartofwisdom.com/Acrobat/Egypt%20Mummies.pdf
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Task (mummify an apple) ... Your job is to turn an ordinary apple into a dried up piece of fruit resembling the way Ancient Egyptians would mummify a human body.
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www.steveharrell.com/ctet225/webquests/Valero_Stone/mum...
www.steveharrell.com/ctet225/webquests/Valero_Stone/mummificationWebquest.htm
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Disease Development The fungus survives the winter as thick-walled resting spores, called oospores, that form within infected fruit as they mummify (Figure 28). These oospores can remain viable in soil for long periods of time.
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ohioline.osu.edu/b861/pdf/ch02_22-26.pdf
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There's nothing like producing your own crop of peaches, plums, and other fruits. However, if that harvest bounty is to be enjoyed, diseases and other pests have to be controlled. A good example is brown rot of peaches, plums, and nectarines. ... Brown rot is "public enemy number one" for these fruit crops,
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msucares.com/newsletters/pests/infobytes/19980304.htm
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[Site Map] [Religion] [Pharaohs] [Symbols] [Dynasties] [Bookstore] [E-Mail] [Links] This site last updated April 7, 2006 Search Fruit of the Nile: powered by FreeFind ©2006 Fruit of the Nile.
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www.fruitofthenile.com/
www.fruitofthenile.com/
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Dream Practices of the Ancient Egyptian ... External Links Modern Egyptian Ritual Magick Egyptian Gods Description An Egyptian Pantheon Kemet.org The Kemetic Orthodox Faith ... Sources Aldred, Cyril, Egyptian Art, Thames and Hudson, 1980. Boylan, Patrick, Thoth: Hermes of Egypt, Oxford University Press, 1922. Budge, Wallis,
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www.fruitofthenile.com/godz.htm
www.fruitofthenile.com/godz.htm
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