What Ash Looks Like
When you burn wood in a fireplace or outside in the woods, it leaves behind ash. It's like tiny pieces of charcoal that are soft and easy to touch. You can even use your fingers to scoop them out, they feel warm at first but cool down quickly.
How Ash is Made
Imagine you have a big pile of leaves or sticks, and you set them on fire. The fire uses up the leaves and sticks, making smoke and sparks. What's left after the fire goes out is ash, it’s like the leftover bits from a snack that you eat until there's nothing left but crumbs.
Sometimes, when big things burn, like trees or buildings, they leave behind lots of ash, which can cover the ground like a thin layer of gray sand. You might even see this after a wildfire! Ash is what’s left when something burns and turns into smoke and sparks, kind of like how a log becomes smaller after you light it on fire.
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See also
- How Does a Battery Work?
- Why Do We Yawn When We're Tired?
- Why Do We Have Different Seasons?
- What Causes the Tides Exactly?
- What Causes a Volcano to Erupt?