English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I need to make a 3-D plant cell If anyone can help I would appericate it. give good detail on how to assemble and products to use. Thanks

The scoring rubric say this.

Cell size after complete- 4x6 to 9x12
Type of cell- plant
cell membrane- What should I use?
nucleus- What should I use?
cytoplasm-What should I use?
vacuole- What should I use?
smooth or rough endoplasmic reticulum- What should I use?
ribosome- What should I use?
lysosome- What should I use?
golgi bodies- What should I use?
mitochondria-What should I use?
organelles to be included - What should I use?
cell wall- What should I use?
chloroplast- What should I use?

2007-03-19 06:44:32 · 1 answers · asked by texastwister333 1 in Science & Mathematics Biology

can not use tape, pins or staples Can use yarn, beads, toothpicks, pipe cleaners, string, straws, styrofoam, plexiglas, food, play-doh and clear drying glue

2007-03-19 06:46:58 · update #1

1 answers

Take 2 large rectangular sponges (of different colours)
Cut an large oval out of the centre of one sponge.
Trace this oval onto the next sponge, and cut out a similar oval.

Insert the oval of one into the space of the other - now you have a cell wall and a membrane.

Glue these together...

When glue is set, slice the sponges length-wise (as if you were making two slices of bread.)

Now you have a cell that is in half.

Dig out a round section that will fit a ping pong ball. this will be your nucleus. Glue the nucleus to one side of the halved cell only - so that you can open the cell to see the 3-d nucleus.

I would recommend doing the same for the other organelles using hard candy - use green round candies for the chloroplasts, and try jelly beans for the mitochondria.

You might want to use a water resistant marker to draw on the golgi/er/vacuoles etc.

2007-03-19 07:09:28 · answer #1 · answered by Loulabelle 4 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers