yes it does because its in little bits
shredded news paper, pellets, shavings, artificial dirt, shredded toilet paper, or just go to your local pet store and look in the hamster section or ask an enployee for help!
fold the paper in different ways to look like a coliseum
No. Scientifically speaking when the shredded news paper is in the rabbits bedding he will be tempted to eat it. However, so long as the paper is safe, there's nothing wrong with the rabbit eating it -- in fact, paper can add to a rabbit's dietary fibre content! Look for plain newsprint or cardboard (not bleached white), with no glossy parts, stickers, tape, and not a lot of printing. See the link below for a source for this information. It might be better not to shred the paper: let the rabbit shred it himself!
ok let's get this thing started...i researched and came up with these two clippets of info "...the seaweed is harvested, it is washed and shredded before being pressed into molds to dry, forming paper like sheets of seaweed." "Finished products are made by a shredding and rack-drying process that resembles papermaking" soooo look up papermaking...especially paper from shredded plant material, and that should be a start. i, too, am interested in this process, so if anyone has further ideas, please share!! i suggest that you also try drying the seaweed first, then shredding in a blender with water...the way paper is made. haven't tried it yet...
If you like science Paper Chromatography is something to look into. You can take Chemistry classes to find out different ideas on how to use Paper Chromatography.
To make sheets of paper look dated, you can try staining the paper with tea or coffee to give it an aged appearance. You can also lightly crumple the paper and then flatten it out again to create creases and wrinkles that suggest wear and tear. Additionally, you can carefully burn the edges of the paper to give it a weathered look.
they are all the same! No they are not! "Take a look to my paper" is ill-educated and ignorant.
they both look white
Paper appears to be a featureless material, which under high magnification is seen to be composed of a tangled mat of fibers.
There are a number of different ways to compare paper presentations in a competition. You can look for different styles or elements for example. The question is about 'compering' a competition, not 'comparing' presentations in a competition!
look for a paper being published in "The Oncologist" later this year (2008)
The light spectrum is composed of multiple wave lengths. Different objects will either absorb or reflect particular wavelengths of light. Humans can actually only perceive 3 different categories of light, red, green, and blue.When you perceive white paper, you are perceiving all 3 components of visible light, red, green, and blue. The bleaching and the construction of white paper is thus made to remove the components that absorb light, and leave the components that reflect light. There is an element of glossiness which is the ability to reflect light directly, and flatness which would be the ability to scatter light when reflecting, giving a white finish rather than a mirrored finish.If you look at red paper, then the green and blue wavelengths of light are absorbed by the paper, and the red wavelength is being reflected back.If you look at green paper, then the red and blue wavelengths of light are being absorbed, and the green is being reflected back.If you look at blue paper, then the red and green wavelengths of light are being absorbed, and the blue wavelength is being reflected back.Black paper will absorb essentially all of the light.Different colors will reflect and absorb the three basic components of light in varying amounts.