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8th Grade Final Assessment Study Guide 2015-16 Chapter 3 – Earth is a system consisting of 4 spheres that interact: Biosphere – all living organisms/biotic factors Geosphere – rocks and the interior of Earth, *sphere with the most mass Hydrosphere – all of Earth’s fresh and salt water Atmosphere – thin envelope of gases that surrounds our planet Constructive (building up – ex. Mountains, volcanoes, earthquakes, deposition, deltas) and destructive forces (weathering – breaking down of rock by wind, ice or water and erosion – the movement of sediment) shape Earth’s surface Scientists have discovered the composition of the interior of the Earth by 1. Direct methods – sampling rocks (limit to how deep we can drill though) 2. Indirect methods – analyzing the reflection and refraction of seismic waves that bend when they go through different materials/layers of the Earth. Order of layers of Earth: 1. Crust (tectonic plates here), made of less dense materials – oxygen & silicon Types: continental (thicker, less dense – granite), oceanic (thinner, denser – basalt) 2. Mantle (convection currents occurs here) - made of magnesium and iron 3. Outer Core - made of LIQUID iron & nickel (very dense) 4. Inner Core made of SOLOD iron & nickel (hottest, densest layer & most pressure) The crust and mantle can also be described as: 1. Lithosphere - crust and upper mantle – contains the tectonic plates 2. Asthenosphere - solid rock that flows 3. Mesosphere -lower mantle Three types of heat transfer: 1. Conduction – direct contact, touching 2. Radiation – electromagnetic waves (visible light, infrared, ultraviolet, xray, etc.) 3. Convection – circulation of fluids (warm materials rise because they are less dense, cooler materials sink because they are more dense). Convection Currents –heat from the mantle and the core and the force of gravity cause rock in the asthenosphere to rise and sink which causes tectonic plates (lithosphere) to move. The formation of the Earth generated heat from gravitational energy and the decay of radioactive elements that are still present today. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Chapter 4 Alfred Wegener came up with the Continental Drift Theory which states that plates have moved slowly and were together in a large supercontinent, Pangaea. His proof was that pieces fit together like a jigsaw puzzle, plant and animal fossils, minerals and glacier marks were found on different continents that used to fit together, and evidence of climate change. (Fossils of animals that live in warm areas found in areas that have moved to a location that is colder). Mid ocean ridges from long chains of mountains that rise up from the ocean floor. Seafloor spreading adds more crust to the ocean floor at mid ocean ridges. Proof of sea floor spreading is pillow lava formed when ocean plates pull apart and magma comes up, rock samples by the ridge are younger, farther from the ridge are older, and magnetic minerals lining up north for awhile on each side of the divergent boundary and then switching to point the other direction for many years due to magnetic reversals. The Plate Tectonic Theory says that the plates are in still in slow constant motion due to convection currents. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Chapter 5 & 6 – Stress causes rock to change it’s volume and shape – 3 types: 1. Compression – plates collide at a convergent boundary, results in: a. folded mountains (Continental crust & continental crust) b. subduction at a deep ocean trench – less dense plate sinks back into the mantle volcanoes can form (Continental & Ocean crust, Ocean & Ocean crust) 2. Tension - pulling apart of rocks, divergent boundary – results in: a. rift valley (Continental & continental) or b. mid-ocean ridge with sea floor spreading (Ocean & Ocean) 3. Shearing - sliding sideways across each other – causes earthquakes, ex. San Andreas fault in California (NA & Pacific plates) Earthquakes mostly happen near plate boundaries, P-waves – primary – fastest, first to arrive, compress & expand ground S – waves – secondary – can’t move through liquids, vibrate at an angle of 90O Surface waves – last, creates circular motion of ground, causes most damage Epicenter – point directly ABOVE where the earthquake starts Focus – point IN the earth where the earthquake starts Earthquakes are measured by 3 scales: Richter Scale – STRENGTH of earthquake Moment Magnitude Scale – total amount of ENERGY released Modified Mercalli Scale – total amount of DAMAGE, SHAKING, & INTENSITY Ring of Fire - where earthquakes & volcanoes happen frequently, around the Pacific plate Volcanoes – occur at plate boundaries, where plates diverge like the mid ocean ridges or plates subducts (ex. Alaskan volcanoes) or hot spots (Hawaiian islands). -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Chapter 7 Fossils - mostly in sedimentary rock, Intrusions - igneous rock (can be radiometric dated) Types of fossils – molds, casts, petrified, preserved remains carbon films and trace. Index fossil – only found in one time period but can be found in many locations Relative age – this rock layer is older than that one and younger than this one. 1. Superposition - if horizontal rock layers are undisturbed, oldest rocks on bottom, youngest on top 2. Law of cross cutting – intrusions(magma that rises) are younger than what they cut across (can't cut PB & Jelly until have PB & J) 3. Unconformity - gap in geologic record where erosion or non-deposition occurred. Absolute age – finding the actual age of the rock 1. Radiometric dating used to measure radioactive decay using Half-life – time it takes for half of the radioactive parent isotope to decay into the stable daughter isotope. A. Rocks – Uranium/Lead & Potassium/Argon- long half life - good for rocks B. Fossils (bones, teeth, wood) - Carbon 14 decays to Nitrogen 14 Geologic Column – record of all the layers of Earth in an area since time began Early Earth – Earth began as a ball of dust, rock and ice in space. Gravity pulled masses together, comets brought water. Eras of Earth’s History: 1. Pre-Cambrian Time – Earth forms 4.6 billion years ago, oceans, rocks, single cell organisms only, algae makes oxygen & ozone layer 2. Paleozoic Era Cambrian – first marine invertebrates, brachiopods, trilobites Ordovician – first jawless fish, first insects Silurian – first land plants Devonian – Age of Fishes, amphibians Carboniferous (Pennsylvanian & Mississippi)- swamps, ferns, reptiles Permian – larger reptiles, Pangaea forms, LARGEST mass extinction 3. Mesozoic Era – Age of Reptiles Triassic – first dinosaurs Jurassic – large land dinosaurs Cretaceous – T-Rex, birds, first flowering plants 4. Cenozoic Era – Age of Mammals Paleogene – mammals, grasses Neogene – large mammals and birds Quaternary – Ice Age, Humans appear -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Chapter 12: Speed – time it took to go a certain distance, speed = distance / time Velocity – speed + direction Acceleration – change in speed or direction A = (Vf – Vi)/t Vf= Vi + (a x t ) Be able to interpret a distance-time graph and a speed-time graph Force is a push or pull that moves objects and is measured in Newtons. Net force – add force if in same direction, subtract forces if in opposite directions. Change in motion occurs with unbalanced forces. An object in motion stays in motion with a constant velocity if there is a balanced force. Friction occurs when 2 objects rub against each other – depends on how hard surfaces are pushed together and the type of surface. Know the four kinds of friction: rolling, sliding, static and fluid. Mass – amount of matter (does not change) vs. weight – amount of gravitational force of an object (changes with different gravity). Law of Universal Gravitation – all objects with mass have an attractive force that depends on distance (closer = > gravity) and mass (> mass = > gravity). Newton’s first law – an object at rest stays at rest, an object in motion stays in motion at a constant velocity unless acted upon by a non-zero net force. INERTIA (the greater the mass of an object, the greater the inertia) Newton’s second law – force = mass x acceleration F=MxA Newton’s third law – for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction Momentum = mass x velocity Law of Conservation of Momentum –if no outside forces, the total momentum doesn’t change Free fall – only the force of gravity causes the object to accelerate Acceleration due to gravity = 9.8 m/s2 – ex. Object falling for 4 seconds = about 40 m/s Orbiting is caused by two forces: Inertia & Gravity. Satellites continuously fall toward Earth because of the force of gravity, but because Earth is curved, they travel around it. Centripetal force– a force that causes an object to move in a circular path around a larger object. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Chapter 9 - Heredity – passing of traits from parent to offspring. Genetics – the study of heredity Genes – carry specific allele for a trait (ex. Brown hair color), found on chromosomes. Dominant – if one dominant allele, is present that trait will appear Recessive – trait that is hidden by the dominant allele, trait will appear can appear in second generation if there are two recessive alleles. Phenotype – appearance of trait (brown hair) Genotype – genetic make-up (alleles – Gg) Homozygous – two of the same alleles, GG or gg, Heterozygous – two different alleles Gg Purebred – all generations have had the same alleles (homozygous dominant or homozygous recessive) Hybrid – mixed heterozygous alleles Types of dominance: 1. Dominance – dominant trait over recessive trait (need 2 recessive traits to have characteristic) ex, B= black fur, b – brown fur 2. Incomplete dominance – blending of two traits (red & white snapdragons cross to make pink) ex. RR = Red, WW = white, RW = pink 3. Codominance – both traits appear (white feathers and black feathers cross to make black and white feathers) FBFB = black feathers, FWFW = white feathers, FBFW = speckled black & white feathers Sex-linked – some traits are found only on the X or Y chromosome (ex. Colorblindness, hemophilia), Women = XX, Men = XY Know how to use a punnett square and pedigree chart and to find the probability of the offspring. Multiple Alleles – some traits have several different alleles (ex. Blood type: A, B or O blood) Polygenic Inheritance – some traits are determined from many genes (ex. Height) Asexual reproduction – one organism required (budding, cloning, mitosis) a. Advantage - Don’t need to have a mate, less time, b. Disadvantage – less variety, less chance for survival if environment changes. Sexual reproduction – two organisms required, makes sex cells – egg, sperm, 23 chromosomes in each to make total of 46 chromosomes for human a. Advantage - better genetic variety in case of disease or environmental changes b. Disadvantage - harder to find mate, takes longer, adv – Mitosis – asexual reproduction – DNA is copied one, cell divides once to make 2 IDENTICAL copies of the cell. Meiosis – sexual reproduction – DNA is copied once, cell divides twice to make 4 new sex cells (sperm or egg) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Chapter 13 Electricity & Magnetism Magnets have a North and a South pole and a magnetic field around them that flows from the north pole to the south pole. Opposite poles attract, like poles repel. Earth has a magnetic field. Magnetism can be created by current (a compass will point north in an electric field) and current can be created by magnetism (by placing a magnet in a coil of wire). An electromagnet (a temporary magnet) can be made with a piece of iron wrapped in coils of wire and connected to a battery. To increase the strength of the electromagnet: 1. Increase the number of coils 2. Increase the closeness of the coils to each other 3. Use a stronger material than iron 4. Use a stronger voltage (battery). Electricity – protons have positive charges, electrons have negative charges. Charges have an electric field that go away from the positive and towards the negative particle. Charges that are alike repel, charges that are opposite attract. Four methods by which charges can build up (static electricity): Friction (rubbing), conduction (direct contact), induction, and polarization. Current electricity – electrons flow through a closed circuit. Conductors have loosely bound electrons that can move freely while insulators have tightly bound electrons. Current (amp) is affected by voltage (volts = electric potential energy) and resistance (ohms). An electric motor transforms electrical energy into mechanical energy. A generator transforms mechanical energy into electrical energy using motion in a magnetic field. A transformer is a device that increases or decreases voltage as it goes from the power plant to the street wires to your house to your game system. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Review of potential and kinetic energy Potential energy – energy that is stored because of its position or motion: 1. Gravitational potential energy –related to the mass of an object and its height above a reference point. 2. Elastic potential energy is associated with how much an elastic object has been stretched or compressed and how difficult such a compression or stretch is. 3. Chemical potential energy is associated with the position and arrangement of the atoms within substances. (ex. Food, coal, oil, chemical reactions, candle) 4. Magnetic potential energy – distance affects the amount of PE 5. Electrical potential energy -distance & the size of the charge affects PE Kinetic energy – energy of motion, increases as an object falls from a higher height Conservation of Energy = the total amount of energy (PE + KE) before the action must EQUAL the total amount of energy after (PE + KE) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Chapter 11 Evolution – process of change over time Adaptation –having traits that increase an organism’s ability to survive and reproduce. Charles Darwin’s Theory – Species change over many generations and become better adapted to new conditions. Over time natural selection can lead to change. Helpful variations may accumulate in a species, while unfavorable ones may disappear. Natural Selection – process by which individual that are better adapted to their environment are more likely to survive and reproduce more than other members of the same species. Includes: Overproduction- more offspring are produced than can survive (lack of resources) Variation- differences in individuals Competition- direct or indirect struggle for resources to survive Evidence that supports evolution: Fossils, similarities in early development, similarities in body structure, similarities in DNA and Protein structure. Homologous structure – structurally similar body parts in related species that have been inherited by a common ancestor. How do new species form? Isolation – group of individuals remain removed from the rest of its species long enough to evolve different traits that prevent reproduction (ex. Natural barrier) Theories about the RATE of evolution : 1. Gradualism – small changes that add up to major changes over long periods of time 2. Punctuated equilibrium – species evolve during short periods of rapid change and then don’t change much. Biodiversity – number of different species in an area. Important for: source of beauty and recreation, economic value, ecological value Keystone species – species that influences the survival of many other species in an ecosystem. Factors that affect biodiversity: Climate, area, niche diversity, genetic diversity, and extinction of species. Endangered species – in danger of becoming extinct. Threatened species – may be endangered soon. Humans affect biodiversity by habitat destruction, poaching, pollution, and exotic species Humans can protect biodiversity by captive breeding, laws and treaties, and habitat preservation.