+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Unit 1: The World A Living Planet. The Earth Inside and Out.

Unit 1: The World A Living Planet. The Earth Inside and Out.

Date post: 12-Jan-2016
Category:
Upload: gerald-fox
View: 217 times
Download: 1 times
Share this document with a friend
Popular Tags:
24
Unit 1: The World A Living Planet
Transcript
Page 1: Unit 1: The World A Living Planet. The Earth Inside and Out.

Unit 1: The World

A Living Planet

Page 2: Unit 1: The World A Living Planet. The Earth Inside and Out.

The Earth Inside and Out

Page 3: Unit 1: The World A Living Planet. The Earth Inside and Out.

Earth’s Structure

• Inside Earth:– Core: center, iron and nickel• Inside = solid; outside = liquid

– Mantle: outside of the core, has multiple layers and contains most of the earth’s mass • Magma: molten rock

– Crust: thin layer of rock at earth’s surface

Page 4: Unit 1: The World A Living Planet. The Earth Inside and Out.

Earth’s Structure

• On and Above Earth:– Atmosphere: layer of gases surrounding the earth– Lithosphere: solid rock portion of the earth’s

surface • uppermost mantle and crust• Seafloor

– Hydrosphere: all the oceans, seas, rivers, lake, and water in the atmosphere

– Biosphere: part of earth where plants and animals live.

Page 5: Unit 1: The World A Living Planet. The Earth Inside and Out.
Page 6: Unit 1: The World A Living Planet. The Earth Inside and Out.

Earth’s Continents

Page 7: Unit 1: The World A Living Planet. The Earth Inside and Out.

How Has the Earth Changed?

• Continental Drift– Alfred Wegener

(1912)– Earth was once

a supercontinent that divided and drifted apart over millions of years

Page 8: Unit 1: The World A Living Planet. The Earth Inside and Out.

Bodies of Water and Landforms

Page 9: Unit 1: The World A Living Planet. The Earth Inside and Out.

Bodies of Water

• Hydrologic cycle- continuous circulation of water between atmosphere, oceans, and earth.

Page 10: Unit 1: The World A Living Planet. The Earth Inside and Out.

Bodies of Water

• Lakes, rivers, streams– Drainage basin-area drained by

a major river and its tributaries– Ground water-water held in

pores of rock– Water table- level at which the

rock is saturated • Rise or fall depending on amount

of precipitation in the region

Page 11: Unit 1: The World A Living Planet. The Earth Inside and Out.

Landforms

• Naturally formed features on the surface of the earth– Examples???

Page 12: Unit 1: The World A Living Planet. The Earth Inside and Out.
Page 13: Unit 1: The World A Living Planet. The Earth Inside and Out.
Page 14: Unit 1: The World A Living Planet. The Earth Inside and Out.

Landforms• Oceanic– Continental shelf- edge of a continent to the deep

part of the ocean• Ridges, valleys, canyons, plains, mountain ranges

Page 15: Unit 1: The World A Living Planet. The Earth Inside and Out.

Forces Shaping the Earth

Page 16: Unit 1: The World A Living Planet. The Earth Inside and Out.

Plate Tectonics

• Enormous moving pieces of the earth’s lithosphere

Page 17: Unit 1: The World A Living Planet. The Earth Inside and Out.

Plate Tectonics

• Divergent boundary-plates move apart, spreading horizontally

• Convergent boundary- plates collide, causing either one to dive under the other or the edges of both to crumple

• Transform boundary- plates slide past one another

Page 18: Unit 1: The World A Living Planet. The Earth Inside and Out.
Page 19: Unit 1: The World A Living Planet. The Earth Inside and Out.

Earthquakes• As plates grind past at a fault, earthquakes

happen. – Measure using seismograph– Richter Scale: determines strength

• The point directly above the focus of the earthquake is the epicenter

Page 20: Unit 1: The World A Living Planet. The Earth Inside and Out.

Tsunami• Caused by

earthquakes, giant wave in the ocean

• 50-100 feet tall

Page 21: Unit 1: The World A Living Planet. The Earth Inside and Out.

Volcanoes

• Magma, gasses, water from lower part of the crust collect in underground chambers

• Magma pours out of a crack in the earth’s surface– Lava

Page 22: Unit 1: The World A Living Planet. The Earth Inside and Out.

Weathering

• Physical and chemical processes that change the characteristics of rock– Breaks down rocks into smaller pieces: sediment

• Mud, silt, sand

• Mechanical Weathering– Physical, does not change the composition of the rock,

just the size• Chemical Weathering– Rock is changed into a new substance due to reactions

w/ elements in air or water

Page 23: Unit 1: The World A Living Planet. The Earth Inside and Out.

Erosion

• Weathered material is moved by wind, water, ice, gravity

Page 24: Unit 1: The World A Living Planet. The Earth Inside and Out.

Building Soil

• Loose mixture of weathered rock, organic matter, air, and water that supports plant growth

• Soil factors:– Parent material– Relief– Organisms– Climate– Time


Recommended