Starburst Rock Cycle Lab
Starburst Rock Cycle Lab
Starburst Rock Cycle Lab
Background: The rocks that make up the Earth are constantly being recycled. One form of rock is often
changed into another form of rock through certain processes of nature that occur over time.
Problem: What happens to rocks as they change from one rock type to another?
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Materials: per group: 3 different colored starburst candies, scissors, piece of aluminum foil or small foil pie
plate, candle, markers or colored pencils, paper, heavy books, blank rock cycle diagram
Procedure:
1. Take your three different colored Starbursts and cut them into as many small pieces as you can. Put them in
a pile on a piece of paper and draw what you observe in your sediments box on the rock cycle diagram.
(At this point, each starburst can represent sediments (pieces of rock or sand) or any type of rock (igneous,
metamorphic, and sedimentary).
6. Share your starburst with your table mates and clean off your table.
7. Complete the conclusion and analysis questions.
Conclusions and Analysis Questions:
1. We already know that we could turn the sedimentary rock into metamorphic rock (we did
that in step #3). How could you turn the sedimentary rock into igneous rock without going
through the metamorphic stage?
2. You are probably starting to see that any form of rock can be changed into any other form of
rock. How could a rock be changed but still be classified as the same form of rock?
4. Which rock is formed from broken-down pieces of rock? How do you think these pieces
harden into rocks in nature?
8. Does this model of the rock cycle have any limitations? Explain your answer.
10. In order for an igneous rock to form, what process must occur?______________________________
Sediments
Sedimentary Rock
Igneous Rock
Metamorphic Rock
Magma