Open-and-go lessons that inspire kids to love science.

Sign up now for tons of free lessons like this one!

Back > Share
Who created the constellations?

Who created the constellations?

Lesson narration:
Scroll for prep
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Slide Image
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Slide Image
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
What do you think these are? Hint: Sometimes they hang from branches. After a few weeks pass, they change shape…
5
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
They’re cocoons of the Tiger Wing Butterfly! This is how the adult looks. The adults aren’t shiny like the cocoons are, but…
5
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Slide Image
...here’s something else shiny--something shiny blue in the leaves. Can you tell what it is?
5
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
It’s a butterfly called a Blue Morpho! The insides of its wings are bright, shiny blue, but the outsides are brown to help it hide!
5
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Slide Image
What could this be?
4
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Slide Image
Hint: you can eat it. Have you eaten anything that’s round and blue before?
4
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Slide Image
They’re berries! They’re called Marble Berries, and they grow in forests in Africa. Sometimes birds decorate their nests with them.
4
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Here are some seeds from a different plant that are a similar shiny blue color! These are Hogberry Seeds from Mexico.
4
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
This is a very close-up view of a living thing. Can you tell what kind of creature it is? Hint: It’s small. It doesn’t have fur or feathers.
3
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
It’s a beetle! Beetles are some of the shiniest, most colorful kinds of creatures on Earth!
3
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Some people even use beetle wings in jewelry! (These passed away naturally.)
3
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
These photos are of the same hummingbird. Why do you think its face is pink and shiny in one photo, and black in the other?
2
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Here’s a hint… look at the blue morpho butterfly again. Do its wings always look bright, shiny blue?
2
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Even though they look different colors, they’re the same feathers! The feathers only look pink when light hits them at the right angle!
2
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Many birds have shiny feathers! Even pigeons have a few! Next time you see a pigeon, look closely at its neck!
2
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Slide Image
These round rocks look a little strange…. Let’s break one open! There’s something special inside… do you know what?
1
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Check it out! These rocks have hollow spaces inside. Sometimes crystals form in the hollow spaces! The rocks are called geodes.
1
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Check out the size of these geodes, some of the largest in the world! One is so huge, you can actually crawl around inside of it!
1
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Slide Image
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
🎉 That’s it for this lesson! How did it go?
Sign up now for more great lessons!
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Lesson narration:

Grades K-5

Current Events And Trending Topics

Stars

1 review

Overview

In this mini-lesson, students explore the night's sky and some of our most famous constellations and their origins.

Exploration

5 mins

Grades K-5

Current Events And Trending Topics

Stars

1 review

Extend this lesson

Slow internet or video problems?