TAMPA BAY, Fl. - The name of the website is sciencing.com  A great resource for the latest science news and some cool ideas for summer experiments for kids of all ages.  And talk about topics covered? Biology, chemistry, physics, geology and nature. There are even links to help determine if your child has math skills each grade should have mastered by now.

Take fractions for example. The best way for kids to learn about hem is with pies - the kind you eat. I love the section on fossils. It shows you how to classify therm The states in which they are most predominant. 

You can also download and print worksheets and games that go along with the science lessons. Let's get back tot he home page. Here on the homepage you'll see the story of the day This one about animals pushed to the brink of extinction by us.  Olby unusual events - like an ice shelf collapse that decimated a penguin colony - the second largest in the world.

The black dots showing the colony in 2015 - the photo below that, the ice shelf gone - only a few penguin colonies left to breed. The explanation? Not 100 percent sure - but the news is grim. Dig deeper for even more science news - mini-earthquakes that have rocked Southern California for decades - 180 thousand to be exact.

But here's what really attracted me to this site. Science projects by the scores. You pick a category - 8 to choose form. You pick the grade level from kindergarten through ninth grade.

Things like generating electricity from lemons or common old potatoes. To make it even easier there are videos called sciencing video vault that take you step by step through the experiment. This one shows you how to build a filter to turn dirty water into clean water - something our aquifers do naturally.

This one shows you what happens during an oil spill to the underwater vegetation. The oil maybe on top but it affects everything below it as well.

Here's one on greenhouse gases. It shows you what happens to the temperature of ice water in a jar when plastic is wrapped around it. Temperatures go up because the plastic wrap won't let it slowly dissipate.

\Don['t worry if you're not a science geek. There's still plenty of interesting stories to make this it worth visiting from time to time.