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Thames & Kosmos Ooze Labs Chemistry Station Science Experiment Kit, 20 Non-Hazardous Experiments Including Safe Slime, Chromatography, Acids, Bases & More, Multi-Color

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Availability: In Stock.
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Arrives Monday, Feb 23
Order within 16 hours and 40 minutes
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Features

  • Play the role of chemist with this huge, colorful, functional lab station!
  • Create glowing slime, fizzing reactions, Oozing Bubbles, colorful chromatography, and more!
  • With 57 pieces, This kit has everything you need to conduct experiments like a real scientist, including beakers, test tubes, flasks, pipettes, and more.
  • Printed experiment cards clip onto the lab station for easy reference and additional experiments and scientific explanations are included in a separate 16-page, full-color manual.
  • Includes non-hazardous chemicals; does not contain borax.
  • A parents' Choice silver honor award winner
  • Skill level: Intermediate

Description

Grab your beakers and test tubes and step up to your special laboratory station for some exciting chemistry experiments. See how much fun chemistry can be as you do slimy, fizzy, colorful, and bubbly experiments. This cool laboratory setup has lots of different vessels and pieces of lab equipment so kids can play the role of chemist while doing real, safe experiments. All of the experiments use non-hazardous chemicals. This playful introduction to the basics of chemistry includes approximately 20 experiments. The experiments are presented on printed cards that can be clipped onto the lab station for easy reference. Experiments include glowing slime, color-changing slime, fizzing reactions, oozing bubbles, rainbow in a test tube, chromatography, Cabbage juice pH tests, solutions, filtering, crystals, fire extinguisher, and underwater VOLCANO. The kit includes a large plastic chemistry station, experiment cards, various vessels in different sizes, syringe, measuring cup, pipette, spatula, tube, petri dish, funnel, non-hazardous chemicals for the experiments, and experiment manual.

Product Dimensions: 11.5 x 5 x 10 inches


Item Weight: 1 pounds


Item model number: 642105


Manufacturer recommended age: 6 years and up


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer: No


Release date: June 30, 2018


Manufacturer: Thames & Kosmos


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Monday, Feb 23

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Super fun science kit — kids love it!
Style: Ooze Labs Chemistry Station
This chemistry station is an awesome science experiment kit. My kid absolutely loves it and has been excited to try experiment after experiment. The activities are super fun and engaging, and the instructions are very clear and easy to follow, even for beginners. It does a great job making chemistry feel hands-on and interesting instead of intimidating. Everything is well organized, and the setup is simple. It’s a fantastic STEM toy that keeps kids entertained while actually learning. Highly recommend it for curious kids who enjoy experiments! ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on January 17, 2026 by Lena Wilt

  • So entertaining and fun
Style: Ooze Labs Chemistry Station
This has been such a hit! MUCH better than the Discovery brand set we got for an older child. This one is great and the whole family is enjoying it.
Reviewed in the United States on January 1, 2026 by Asdf

  • Great foe presents
Style: Ooze Labs Chemistry Station
Grandson loves it
Reviewed in the United States on December 27, 2025 by Angela

  • Inexpensive set of chemistry equipment for kids
Style: Ooze Labs Chemistry Station
Got this for my 8-year-old daughter who's really into learning potions like Harry Potter in Snape's class, and requested more chemistry experiments. It was on sale for around $15 at the time, looked similar to the Magic Science kit but I liked how it had a whole lab setup. Comes with various test tubes with lids, pipettes, plastic stirring sticks, and little measuring cups, plus a plastic base with towers and test tube holders. You can move the test tube holders around however you want. There are a couple of clips to hold the laminated cards for the first 9 experiments, which makes them easy to read while doing the experiments. It did not include any gloves or safety glasses as some other kits seem to, but the experiments are overall pretty safe. I was mostly letting her do them on her own, while listening in and doing various cleaning around the kitchen, while occasionally looking in and reminding her to actually read the instructions again and make sure she wasn't skipping any. After doing the first 6 experiments, I asked her how much her friends would probably like this as a gift on a scale from 1 to 10, and she rated it an 87. Apparently her friends really love slime. But apart from the slime in the first two experiments, almost all of these are experiments you can easily do at home with baking soda, vinegar, water, oil, sugar, and food coloring. But considering I got it for around $15, I do think that's a good price for a nice setup of test tubes and a holder with nice instruction cards. Experiments: 1. Glow in the Dark Slime: mix this powder with water, stir/shake it until it solidifies. Take into a dark room and see that it glows in the dark. My daughter didn't really want to touch it because it was way *too* slimy, so we transferred it into a baggie to poke at. These first few experiments used the same tall wide test tube, so we couldn't start doing the later ones while waiting for the first few. I wish they'd included more of those test tubes so we could do them at the same time. It was a little boring waiting for the slime to solidify. 2. Thermocolor Slime: Same as before, mix this powder with water and stir/shake until it solidifies. Ours started out green and putting it in hot water did nothing, but then I realized maybe it was already too warm and tried putting it in ice water, so it turned blue again. Same as previous slime, it went in a baggie. 3. Fizzy Fun Reaction: Citric Acid in one test tube, baking powder in the other, mix them together and it fizzes everywhere! No warning that it would foam, but we'd done this before in KiwiCo kits so she knew what was about to happen and held it over the sink. Easy experiment to do without this kit. 4. Oozing Bubbles: Oil floating on water, add fizzy dye tablet and watch the colored water go up and then fall down again like a lava lamp. Doesn't last long, but it comes with two more tablets so you can repeat the experiment. (Or just get fizzy tablets from the store) Another easy experiment to do without this kit. 5. Colorful Chromatography: Draw on this piece of filter paper with marker, then drop water onto the center and watch what happens as the water spreads out. A neat little art project that will take a few minutes. 6. Rainbow in a Test Tube: She had a hell of a time dyeing the cups different colors, because it wanted her to make 6 colors out of 5 dye tablets, and also it wanted her to use only *part* of a tablet for this (and save the rest for future experiments). The tablets were solid enough that I ended up bringing out my meat mallet to smash them into crumbs, and there wasn't a good way to save the remaining crumbs separated from each other for future experiments. A different form factor for these dyes would have been better. Maybe two half-size tablets of each color instead! This experiment is also pretty easy to do without this kit, since it's just food coloring and sugar water. We stopped here on the first day after 2-3 hours of this because the next one wanted red cabbage that we didn't have and it felt like time for a break, but here's the remaining ones: 7. Color-Changing Indicators: Make red cabbage liquid, and watch as it changes color when you add liquids of different pH. Interesting that the kit included citric acid and baking soda for experiment #3, but now that we're doing more acids and bases, it wants us to use our own from the kitchen. Why even include the first packets? This experiment is also easy to do without this kit, as all the chemicals are from my kitchen, they're just being mixed in this neat lab setup. 8. Goopy Oobleck: Mix corn starch and water, play with this non-Newtonian fluid. This experiment barely even uses the lab, since you're mostly just mixing it in a bowl (not included in kit) 9. Mixing Colors: Using the crumbs left over of the dye tablets from #6, make colored water in test tubes and then do this complicated setup where you use a flexible plastic tube attached to a syringe to move the colored water from the test tubes into an erlenmeyer flask. I guess it makes you feel like a scientist? 10. The 10th card isn't an experiment, just an extremely simplified kid's periodic table that only includes the first four rows. I don't have a problem with this, they get the gist of it without getting overwhelmed by too many elements. The remaining experiments are in the booklet that comes with the kit: 10. Oil and Water: Mix oil and water. See that they separate when you let them sit. 11. Moooooving Colors: Use the same colored water from #9 (probably should save them from that experiment). Drop colors into milk in a petri dish, then add dish soap and watch the colors move. 12. Chemical Foaming: Compare what happens when adding baking soda to vinegar water when one of the tubes has dish soap in it. 13. Acid Detective: Try adding baking soda to various household liquids (milk, juice, oil, tea) to see if they're acidic or not. 14. Powder Detective: Tell three identical white powders apart (powdered sugar, corn starch, baking soda) by seeing if they will dissolve in water and whether they react with acid. 15. Self-inflating balloon: Put baking soda in a balloon (not included in this kit) and put it over a bottle (not included in this kit) and watch the balloon expand when the baking soda falls into the vinegar. 16. Invisible Ink: I hope you saved that cabbage juice from experiment #7! Mix it with vinegar, use a cotton swab to draw on a piece of paper, let it dry, then write with baking soda water on the dry paper. 17. Salty and Sweet Solutions: Look at salt and sugar crystals using a magnifying glass (not included in this kit) then dissolve them in water to see how many drops you need to use to dissolve them completely. 18. Growing Salt Crystals: Make a supersaturated salt solution and put it in the petri dish for a couple of days to watch crystals form. 19. Carbon Dioxide Fire Extinguisher: Light a candle! Then use the fizzy tablet to make carbon dioxide in a test tube and use the flexible tubing to direct the gas towards the flame to put it out. 20. Separating Mixtures: Make dirt water. Use filter paper to filter the dirt out. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on March 19, 2025 by K. Dougherty K. Dougherty

  • Easy to use, clear
Style: Ooze Labs Chemistry Station
My kids LOVED this! The setup was easy enough that they could do it themselves, with a good variety of experiments. The cards are clear and step-by-step, and the pieces were clearly labeled. It filled their “camp mommy summer school” science time for a full week, and they learned so much.
Reviewed in the United States on August 15, 2025 by Jill Johnstone

  • Super Fun!
Style: Ooze Labs Chemistry Station
This set has enough components to make a really fun set for kids. They love the different types of containers and vials. They also like the tubing that comes with the syringe. It is fun to be able to put the tubes up in the air with the clips. Depending on the age group , there are many ways to have fun with this set including something as simple as colored water in the different vials to have fun with. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on June 10, 2025 by msds msds

  • Nice science set!
Style: Ooze Labs Chemistry Station
Very easy to put together! Looks as described. Little one was very happy!
Reviewed in the United States on January 5, 2026 by Kindle Customer

  • Not a quick put away toy
Style: Ooze Labs Chemistry Station
This kit is fun but its not something you can easily put away you have to disassemble it or have a big hunk of plastic sitting out permanently
Reviewed in the United States on December 29, 2025 by melissaLO

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