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Summer Ice Storm

Summer Ice Storm

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You might be wondering how pieces of ice can fall from the sky when it’s hot out.

It’s okay if you aren’t sure of the right answer yet. Answering this question will be like solving a puzzle—you’ll need to put pieces together.

You’ll learn more and more as you go through each lesson in this unit, and you’re going to use a sheet to record what you’re learning along the way. Don’t worry if you’re unsure or if it isn’t perfect. You’ll update this sheet several times.

Let’s get started! We have an expert here to walk you through it, step by step.

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You've completed the introduction to the anchor phenomenon!

Be sure to keep each student's Summer Ice Storm Worksheet accessible. They will add to it after each Mystery.

Teach Mystery 1 next: Where do clouds come from?

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Image & Video Credits

Mystery Science respects the intellectual property rights of the owners of visual assets. We make every effort to use images and videos under appropriate licenses from the owner or by reaching out to the owner to get explicit permission. If you are the owner of a visual and believe we are using it without permission, please contact us—we will reply promptly and make things right.

Other
All illustrations by Alex Kalomeris
Cars Buried in Hail by Ulises Ruiz/AFP/Getty Images
Guadalajara at Night Photo by Alan Levine
Hail Damaged Car Photo 1 by aydngvn
Hail Damaged Car Photo 2 by mwesselsphotography
Hail Damaged Car Photo 3 by Official
Hail Damaged Car Photo 4 by Christian Delbert
Hail Damaged Cars Illustration by Lorelyn Medina
Hail Flowing in Streets by Weather Events
Hail Hitting Roof by John Neff
Hail in Hand by Rbreidbrown
Hail in Hand 2 by Dan Ross
Hail on the Ground by Noir
Hailstorm Flooding by Sandra Moreno Villasenor
People Walking on Ice by Fernando Carranza/Reuters
People in Guadalajara Photo by Wonderlane
People in Guadalajara Video by MassiveClips
Start of Hailstorm by Dustin Wilcox

Activity Prep

Print Prep

Note: This lesson is part of this unit’s Anchor Layer. If you have the Anchor Layer turned on, we recommend teaching all lessons in the remainder of this unit in order.

The anchor phenomenon for this unit is an icy hailstorm that happens during warm summer weather. In the activity, Summer Ice Storm, students generate observations and questions about the phenomenon and create an initial explanation of how it happened.

Preview activity

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