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Finally understand earthquakes with this Jell-O replica of San Francisco that rocks and rolls just as much...
3 years ago
Excite - Entertainment
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Feature on Liz Hickok and her San Francisco in Jell-O sculpture at the Exploratorium. Part of the 1906 Earthquake Centennial Events
2m 41s |
2 years ago
YouTube
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VSeller
...Jell-O was featured as part of the earthquake exhibit at the Exploratorium in San Francisco, April 1st. This is my video of the teeny-tiny jello SF; I was sad it was only of the Exploratorium ...
2 years ago
iMoondo
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Ivanhoe
Finally understand earthquakes with this Jell-O replica of San Francisco that rocks and rolls just as much...
3 years ago
RooTv
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...Jell-O was featured as part of the earthquake exhibit at the Exploratorium in San Francisco, last saturday, April 1st. This is my video of the teeny-tiny jello SF; I was sad it was only of the ...
3 years ago
Blip.tv
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At San Francisco's Exploratorium, a scaled-down model of the city made with Jell-O helps visitors visualize how the city would shake during a major earthquake. In another display, a bowl filled with wet sand and a mallet shows how shockwaves can cause soil to liquefy, swallowing buildings like quicksand -- a grave threat for many San Francisco neighborhoods that were built on sandy landfill. read the full story ... BACKGROUND: Using satellite images for an initial design, artist Liz Hickok built a scale model of San Francisco using nothing but molded Jell-O, which was featured at the Exploratorium Science Museum. The jiggling mini-city was mounted on plexiglass and placed on a shake table to simulate what happens to buildings during an earthquake. Specifically, it demonstrates liquefaction: when the tremors pressurize the water in soil underneath a building. WHAT IS GELATIN? Gelatin is a processed protein called collagen, derived from the bones, hooves and connective tissues of cows or pigs. Those parts are ground up and mixed with acid or other chemicals to break down the cellular structure, thereby releasing the collagen. Boiling it causes a layer of gelatin to form on the top, which can be skimmed off for further processing. Eventually it ends up in your local grocery store aisle in powder form. WHY IS JELLO LIKE DNA? Different proteins have different structures. Gelatin's structure is similar to DNA, except where DNA has two chains twisted together into a helix, the proteins that make up gelatin have three chains of amino acids tightly bonded together. The only thing that breaks those bonds is energy. Boiling water adds a great deal of energy, in the form of heat, sufficient to cause the three strands of amino acids in collagen to unwind. As gelatin cools, the chains start bonding again. WHY IT GELS: Because it takes so long to cool, the amino acid chains become entangled as the mixture is stirred, and water gets into gaps between the chains. You can add ice so the gelatin will set more quickly, but it is never quite as firm as that produced by the slow-set method. The various molecules cool so quickly that they can't self-organize in the most efficient and strongest bonds possible; instead, only a loose matrix forms. If the energy levels of the requisite molecules are lowered more gradually, as in the slow-setting method, they have more time to align properly, forming a much denser lattice structure, trapping the mixture of sugar, pigments and water in between the strands of amino acids. The Incorporated Research Institutions for Seismology, Inc. contributed to the information contained in the TV portion of this report.
3 years ago
American Institute of Physics
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