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Friday 19th January 2007: Issue: 64

Hoorah! We’re back! It’s 2007 and we’ve no time to lose.  Did you make any New Year’s resolutions?  You know, like ‘send more jokes and ideas in to Wired Up’ or ‘enter more Planet Science competitions’. Yeah yeah ‘course you did… Well 2007 could be your year.  You never know.

  1. Planet Picks – the January Quiz
  2. The Wire – Endangered species and slimming chewing gum
  3. Try This! –  Colourful coins
  4. Gear for Grabs – Flipside magazines
  5. Winners – Mousetrap Games
1. Planet Picks – News from the world of Planet Science…

It's the January Quiz. Do you know how far a person would walk in a year? You do?  Well that’s good – you’ll have no trouble with this month’s quiz then.

If you get all the questions right you’ll go into the prize draw for a Blue Glow Brick. This absorbs daylight and gives off a blue glow at night – perfect for those dull, dark January evenings!

Enter here

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2. The Wire  – Science news straight to your Inbox…

A campaign's been launched to protect some of the world's weirdest and most unusual animals because they're in danger of becoming extinct.

One of them is the bactrian camel. It has two humps instead of the usual one but there are only 1,000 of them left in the wild. One of the world's smallest mammals, the bumbleebat, is also under threat.

An expert from the zoological society said that if these animals disappear, there will be nothing similar left on the planet.

  • Pygmy hippopotamus
  • Attenborough's long-beaked echidna
  • Hispaniolan solenodon
  • Bactrian camel
  • Yangtze River dolphin
  • Slender loris
  • Hirola antelope
  • Golden-rumped elephant shrew
  • Bumblebee bat
  • Long-eared jerboa
For more details check out the Newsround site, Or the ZSL’s  

Did you know? A new chewing gum is being developed that could help stop people overeating. Scientists say the gum will contain a drug which works by tricking your stomach into thinking it's full. They're working on it now but say it won't be ready for use by patients for between five and eight years. The wonders of science, eh?

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3. Try This! – Science experiments for you to try at home...

Colourful Coins...

You will need:

  • Saucer
  • Paper towel
  • Vinegar
  • A few pennies (or other foreign coins with a copper coating)

What to do:

  1. Fold the paper towel in half a couple of times and put into the saucer. Pour on enough vinegar to cover the paper towel.
  2. Place the coins on the wet paper towel and leave for a few hours.
  3. What has happened to the coins? Pick them up and compare the sides exposed to the air with the sides next to the paper towel.
  4. Wash the coins and your hands carefully when you have finished the experiment.

What’s going on?

The coins go a blue-green colour because the vinegar (aka acetic acid) reacts with the copper to make copper acetate.

Copper acetate has been used since Egyptian times as a green pigment called verdigris. It is the most common green pigment found in medieval manuscripts, probably because it is so easy to make. The scribes or artists simply had to place some copper strips in vinegar and then scrape off the green powder when it had formed.

You may see less verdigris on the bottoms of the coins. This could be for two reasons. One is because the reaction needs an oxidising agent. In this situation the oxidising agent is oxygen from the air. The bottoms of the coins are right next to the wet paper towel and don’t have as much oxygen around them, so more of the copper will stay as it is.

And more?
Most copper coins go dull after a while as the copper becomes oxidised by the oxygen in air. Leave dull copper coins soaking in tomato ketchup. The oxidised copper reacts and the product goes into the tomato ketchup solution, so you are left with unreacted shiny copper.

You may get a surprise when you see the real colour of the copper coins! To be certain this colour did not come from the tomato ketchup, try using brown sauce instead – do the coins go the same colour as they did in the ketchup?

Note:
Copper acetate can be an irritant and is harmful if inhaled or swallowed, so make sure you wash your hands (and the coins) very well.

Also, technically it is illegal to ‘deface coins of the realm’ – and that’s why we suggested using foreign coins. (We don’t want anyone arrested for trying out our experiments.)

This experiment came from Planet Science’s  Little Book of Experiments.

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4. Gear for Grabs – You’ve got to be in it to win it...

Run out of reading material?  You’ll be wanting some Flipside magazines then. Who wouldn’t want one of these glossy mags stuffed with articles, photos and facts on amazing science and technology? We’ve got five pairs of Flipsides to give away – in each pair is a November and a Bondtastic December issue!

So if you’d like to win a pair of Flips, then send us an email with your name, age and address to: randomised.news@nesta.org.uk with ‘DOUBLE BACK FLIP’ as the subject. The winners will be picked at random at 5pm on Thursday 25th January 2008.

Good luck!

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5. Winners – Has your name been picked out of the bag?

Remember issue no. 63?  We were giving away a game of Mousetrap.   What a great game that is. The lucky winner is Laurie Boyle of Ripon.

Well done!

So keep entering – you never know! Next time - it could be YOU...

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THAT’S ALL FOR NOW

Got Wired-Up? Got clued up!

Don’t forget that Wired-Up will be hitting your inboxes every fortnight from now on, but in the meantime, send any questions, comments, jokes or experiment ideas to: randomised.news@nesta.org.uk

P.S. If you wish to unsubscribe from Wired-Up then please email katie.walsh@nesta.org.uk with UNSUBSCRIBE in the subject line.

Bye for now!