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Bibliographic Information

Ferguson, Fleur & Forman, Scott & Kleinberg,


Jamie. (2014). Crazy Crystal Creations.
[online] Science Buddies. Available at:
http://www.sciencebuddies.org/science-fairprojects/project_ideas/Chem_p082.shtml#bac
kground. [Accessed 14th February 2015]

Hammonds, A. (2015). How to Make Salt


Crystals. [online] WikiHow. Available at:
http://www.wikihow.com/Make-Salt-Crystals
[Accessed 14 Feb. 2015]

JupiterJesus, (2015). Water: Evaporation Rate.


[Blog] Beer Geeking. Available at: http://beergeeking.blogspot.com.au/2011/04/all-grainbrewing-evaporation-rate.html [Accessed 15
Feb. 2015]

Radar, Andrew. (2013). Solutions and


Mixtures. [online] Chem4Kids. Available at:
http://www.chem4kids.com/files/matter_soluti
on.html [Accessed 13th February 2015]

Holden, Alan & Morrison, Phylis. Crystals and


Growing Crystals. [book]. Massachusetts
Institute of Technology. 1960.

Water.usgs.gov, (2015). Evaporation, The


Water Cycle, from USGS Water-Science
School. [online]. Available at:
http://water.usgs.gov/edu/watercycleevaporati
on.html [Accessed 13 Feb. 2015]

Outline Of Information /
Evaluation Of Source
An experiment on creating
your own crystals at home
from sugar.
Sources is generally reliable
as it is a government website,
and the submitted work is
student work. Also the
comments at the bottom of
the page tell you how good or
bad the work is. Last updated
a year ago.
A set of steps on how to make
sugar crystals at home. Not
very reliable as it is open for
editing for the public, but the
comments and helpful likes
on the bottom can indicate
popularity. Updated recently.
A blog on an experiment to
evaluate how long it takes to
evaporate water, and to
calculate the rate. Not very
reliable as it is a recount blog,
and the experiment has no
validity provided. Updated
recently also.
A passage on solutions and
mixtures (used for research).
Reliable site due to constant
updates, and no way to
change information, but last
update was 2 years ago.
A book on crystallisation; its
processes, and how to make
them at home. Reliable due to
it being a book published
under MIT University, it is old.
Due to slow discoveries in
crystallisation, the information
is quite the same as it is now.
A site on evaporation and the
water cycle. Reliable source it
is a government website
specifically for schools.
Updated recently.

Wikipedia, (2014). Crystal structure. [online].


Available at:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crystal_structure
[Accessed 15 Feb. 2015]

Page on crystal structure and


the lattice formation for
crystals. Unreliable side due to
it being edited by the general
public, but provides fast
information. Updated last
year.

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