The following labs were written by Julia Hains and adapted by ISIS:
- “Whose Cloth is this?”
- “How Much Copper is in that Brass Object”
- “The Cause of Color”
- “How Much Copper is in That Penny?”
- “Iron in Cereal”
- “Oranges, Lemons, and Limes, Oh My!”
- “Giant Molecules of Plastic”
- “What's that Wonderful Smell?”
- “Gas in a Bottle”
- “Food Coloring”
- “Extra-Terrestrial Beings - Our DNA”
“Crime Scene” was written by Julia Hains using an idea from Dr. Kay Conner, ChemCamp, Purdue University and adapted by ISIS.
Police reports, Crime Scene diagram and Crime Scene Search Patterns were adapted from ChemCamp.
The following labs were written by and adapted by ISIS from the authors noted:
- “Lipstick: Thin layer chromatography” by Dr. Kay Conner, ChemCamp, Purdue University
- “Lipstick” by Gerald Long
- “Gunshot” by Darwin B. Dahl, ChemEd, December 1991
- “Relative Determination of Pigment Content in Changing Leaves” by Dr. Tom Goyne, Valparaiso University
- “Lead in Water Analysis” by Clifton Meloan
- “Sunglasses” and “Caffeine” by B. Coburn Richardson and Thomas G. Chasteen
- “Sunscreens” by Richard D. Cornelius, JChemEd, January 1997
- “Electrophoretic Separation of Proteins” by Modern Biology, West Lafayette, IN
- “Caffeine” and “How Fast is your Pain Reliever” by ChemMobile, Purdue University