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Using NGS Maps to Study Oceans GOAL: Present strategies to help students use NGS maps to learn about the ocean. (To view an audio power point about this lesson, go to www.coexploration.org/ceo2006. After registering on this site, choose “keynotes”. This lesson is from Dr. Mike Libbee‟s presentation in Week 3 and 4). OBJECTIVES: Students will be able to use NGS maps to: $ Describe the ocean using the 5 Themes of Geography $ Locate ocean features relative to the United States $ Identify information and define concepts about the ocean MATERIALS: NGS map From Sea to Shining Sea: Exploring America’s Ocean Realms; Student Worksheets; Student Activity Sheets (included) PROCEDURES: 1. Review the 5 Themes of Geography with students. Using the map, ask the following questions to apply the 5 Themes to the study of the ocean. a. What are some of the natural characteristics of the Juan de Fuca Ridge? (Give students worksheet #1 and have them use the text and picture of the ridge to find evidence of natural characteristics. Sample answers: i. Landforms – volcanic mountain range, volcanic vents forming “chimneys” ii. Geologic plates – the Juan de Fuca and Pacific Plates iii. Source of energy for life – sulfur rich chemicals iv. Source of food – bacteria at the base of the food chain v. Water features – undersea hot springs and frigid seawater vi. Animals – red-and-white tube worms , deep sea crabs, mussels vii. Mineral deposits – sulfur bearing mineral b. What are some human characteristics of Dry Tortugas National Park? Human Characteristics of the Dry Tortugas include: i. Use of turtles as a resource ii. Being part of the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary iii. A long history of human impact iv. Economic use as a tourist destination v. Fishing c. Compare the Dry Tortugas case study with the Northwest Hawaiian Islands case study. What can we learn from looking at their absolute and relative locations? (Latitudes are similar, and almost tropical. Longitudes are very different, so that the Dry Tortugas are in the warm shallows of the Gulf of Mexico, and the Hawaiian Islands are in the Pacific Ocean. The relative location with respect to the US is very different.) d. How have people interacted with and changed the environment of Georges Banks? Use the text and picture of Georges Banks to answer the following: i. How have people used Georges Banks as a resource? (fish) ii. How have people adapted to the environment? (much better fishing equipment, etc) iii. How have people impacted Georges Banks? (over fishing depleted the resource; new regulations in place to restore resources) e. Use the text and picture of the Gulf Stream to answer: How are places linked by the movement of earth, air, water, and living things? (Many examples in text. Have students find and underline answers) f. Discuss the „region‟ of ocean. To some extent, oceans and continents define each other. Oceans are the large bodies of water that separate continents. Continents are the large bodies of land that separate oceans. Traditionally there have been 4 oceans, but one of the ocean literacy standards says “The earth has one big ocean with many features.” Alternatively, the International Hydrographic Organization is recommending a fifth ocean, the Southern Ocean. Source: (https://cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/oo.html) Discuss the question: How many oceans do we have, one, four or five? 2. The From Sea to Shining Sea map can be used to describe the relative location of many of the ocean features closest to the United States. One of the basic ideas of remembering where things are is to develop associations with other places. Answer the questions on Student Worksheet #2 by using the Sea to Shining Sea map. After checking the answers (below), Activity Sheet #1 can be cut into strips for students to play “I Have, Who Has?” Answers to Student Worksheet #2: 1. Hudson Bay 8. Sea of Japan 2. Gulf of California 9. Hawaiian Islands 3. Caribbean Sea 10. Aleutian Islands 4. Gulf of Mexico 11. Kuroshio Current 5. Arctic Ocean 12. Subarctic Current 6. Bering Sea 13. California Current 7. Sea of Okhotsk 14. North Equatorial Current 3. National Geographic maps are a wonderful source of basic conceptual information, and provide good brief descriptions of relevant concepts. Read the definitions found on the From Sea to Shining Sea Map and complete the 3-part matching exercise on Student Worksheet #3 by linking terms with a definition and a statement of significance. Answers: Concept Definition Significance Openings in the ocean floor typically at or near a mid-ocean ridge which release hot, mineralrich water. Develop far offshore in geologically stable areas of low sedimentation, well beyond the continental margins. These may support rare and unusual forms of life. Trenches Formed when dense oceanic crust slides beneath lighter oceanic crust or continental crust. The Mariana Trench, Earth’s deepest, plunges nearly 6.8 miles beneath the Pacific’s surface. Seamounts Active or extinct underwater volcanoes rising at least 3,200 feet above the seafloor. Like pieces of a gigantic jigsaw puzzle, Earth‟s rocky crust is broken into tectonic plates that move. Those that penetrate the surface become islands, such as the Hawaiian chain Their slow yet rough-and-tumble jostling causes earthquakes and volcanoes, and forges mountains, valleys, seamounts, and deep-sea trenches. Hot Spots Streams of molten rock arise deep inside the Earth and move upward through the crust to erupt on the surface or seafloor. As seafloor spreading moves the crust over these “hot spots”, eruptions can create chains of seamounts and islands. Seafloor Spreading Occurs where two tectonic plates slowly separate – by several inches a year on average. Magma seeps into these fissures, forming new crust and raising mid-ocean ridges. Continental Slopes At their outer edges, the continental shelves descend abruptly along the continental slopes to the true ocean floor. The continental slopes are riven with submarine canyons, the work of eroding streams of muddy water. These often reach a depth of about 12,000 feet. Hydrothermal Vents Abyssal Plains Tectonic Plates Submarine Canyons K:\MGA\NGS Maps\From Sea to Shining Sea Map\Using NGS Maps to Study Oceans.doc These extensive, featureless regions of the deep ocean floor constitute Earth’s flattest surfaces Sediment ultimately seeps through and spreads out across the vast flat abyssal plains of the ocean floor. Student Worksheet #1 What are some of the natural characteristics of the Juan de Fuca Ridge? Landforms Geologic plates Source of energy Source of food Water features Animals Minerals Student Worksheet #2 1. What body of water is almost completely surrounded by Canada and named for an explorer? 2. What body of water is named for a state but completely outside of the United States, and almost completely surrounded by Mexico? 3. What body of water is southeast of the United States and a highly popular tourist destination due to many beaches and warm climate? 4. What body of water is surrounded by the United States and Mexico and often affects the path of hurricanes? 5. What is the coldest and most northern ocean? 6. What is west of Alaska, and south of the strait of the same name that allowed native peoples from Asia to migrate to North America? 7. What body of water is almost entirely enclosed by the eastern end of Russia, and cut off from the Bering Sea by a 1000 mile long peninsula? 8. What is located between our most important Asian trade partner and a peninsula inhabited by a divided country? 9. What is our 50th state, located almost 3,000 miles from the rest of the country? 10. What is the archipelago giving Alaska the most miles of shoreline of any state in the United States? 11. What current carries warm water north toward the Bering Sea? 12. What current carries cold water east and then south past the Aleutian Trench? 13. What carries cool water and flows south along the west coast of the United States? 14. What carries warm water west in the South Pacific Ocean? Activity Sheet #1: I HAVE THE NORTH EQUATORIAL CURRENT. Who has the body of water that is almost completely surrounded by Canada and named for an explorer? I HAVE HUDSON BAY Who has the body of water named for a state but completely outside of the United States, and almost completely surrounded by Mexico? I HAVE THE GULF OF CALIFORNIA Who has the body of water that is southeast of the United States and a highly popular tourist destination due to many beaches and warm climate? I HAVE THE CARIBBEAN SEA Who has the body of water surrounded by the United States and Mexico and often affecting the path of hurricanes? I HAVE THE GULF OF MEXICO Who has the coldest and most northern ocean? I HAVE THE ARCTIC OCEAN Who has the body of water that is west of Alaska, and south of the strait of the same name that allowed native peoples from Asia to migrate to North America? I HAVE THE BERING SEA Who has the body of water almost entirely enclosed by the eastern end of Russia, and cut off from the Bering Sea by a 1000 mile long peninsula? I HAVE THE SEA OF OKHOTSK Who has the body of water located between our most important Asian trade partner and a peninsula inhabited by a divided country? I HAVE THE SEA OF JAPAN Who has our 50th state, located 2300 miles from the rest of the country? I HAVE THE HAWAIIAN ISLANDS Who has the archipelago giving Alaska the most miles of shoreline of any state in the United States? I HAVE THE ALEUTIAN ISLANDS Who has the current that carries warm water north toward the Bering Sea? I HAVE THE KUROSHIO CURRENT Who has the current that carries cold water east and then south past the Aleutian Trench? I HAVE SUBARCTIC CURRENT Who has the current that carries cool water and flows south along the west coast of the United States? I HAVE CALIFORNIA CURRENT Who has the current that carries warm water west in the South Pacific Ocean? Student Worksheet #3 Concept Hydrothermal Vents Definition Significance Develop far offshore in geologically stable areas of low sedimentation, well beyond the continental margins. . Trenches Those that penetrate the surface become islands, such as the Hawaiian chain. Like pieces of a gigantic jigsaw puzzle, Earth‟s rocky crust is broken into tectonic plates that move. Hot Spots Magma seeps into these fissures, forming new crust and raising mid-ocean ridges. At their outer edges, the continental shelves descend abruptly along the continental slopes to the true ocean floor. The continental slopes are riven with submarine canyons, the work of eroding streams of muddy water.