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Study Guide Key: Cycling the Earth’s Materials. 1. Label all parts of the Rock Cycle. 2. 2. What flow of energy drives processes such as melting, crystallization, and deformation? Internal heat energy. 3. What flow of energy drives processes such as weathering and erosion? Energy from the sun. 4. What is the rock cycle? Any rock on Earth can be changed into a new type of rock by processes driven by Earth’s internal heat energy or by energy from the sun. 5. Give an example of an igneous rock Granite. How does it form? Cooling of magma/lava. 6. Given an example of sedimentary rock Sandstone. How does it form? Compaction and cementation of sediments. 7. Give an example of metamorphic rock marble. How does it form? Heat and pressure causing change in composition and appearance. Learning Target MS- ESS1-4 I can construct a scientific explanation based on evidence from rock strata for how the geologic time scale is used to organized Earth’s 4.6 billion year old history. Use the diagram below to answer #8-11: 8. What is the Law of Superposition? The lower layers are older. 9. What is the Law of Horizontality? All rock layers are originally horizontal. 10. Put the layers in order of oldest to youngest: C, B,D, A 11. How does the Law of Discontinuity help you determine the relative age of D? The law says that the discontinuity is younger than the surrounding older rock. D Use the fossil diagram to answer #11-13 11. What kind of rock are these fossils in? Sedimentary 12. Which layer contains the oldest fossils? Layer 1 13. Use the order of rocks and the fossil record to give relative order of events. Include appearance/disappearance of trilobites, ammonites, shells and fish. Trilobites are the oldest fossil appearing and going extinct in layer 1. The shells appear in layer 2-5. The ammonites appear at the same time as the shells but don’t appear in layer 5. The fish appear in layers 3-5 and are the most recent fossils of the three to appear Learning Target: I can construct a model of the layers of the Earth. I can explain that internal heat energy drives processes in the rock cycle. Crust Mantle (upper and lower) Outer Core Inner Core Temperature Crust State of Matter Solid Composition Notes Oceanic crust made up of iron, oxygen, silicon, magnesium and aluminium. Continental crust made up of granite, sedimentary rocks and metamorphic rocks. The Earth's surface is covered by its thinnest layer, the crust. Land is made of continental crust, which is 8km to 70km thick and made mostly from a rock called granite. The layer beneath the ocean bed is made of oceanic crust, which is about 8km thick and made mainly from a rock called basalt. liquid / solid iron, oxygen, silicon, magnesium and aluminium This layer is up to 670km below the Earth’s surface. The lower part of the upper mantle is made from both solid and melted rock (liquid), while the rock in the upper region is stiffer, because it’s cooler. solid iron, oxygen, silicon, magnesium and aluminium Liquid iron, nickel, sulphur and oxygen Solid iron and nickel The lower mantle is found between 670km and 2,890km below the surface, and is made from solid rock. The rock is hot enough to melt, but is solid because of the pressure pushing down on it. This liquid layer of iron and nickel is 5,150km deep. The outer core flows around the centre of the Earth, and the movement of the metals creates our planet’s magnetic field. The Earth’s inner core is a huge metal ball, 2,500km wide. Made mainly of iron, the temperature of the ball is 5,000°C to 6,000°C – that’s up to 6,000 times hotter than our atmosphere and scorching enough to make metal melt! The metal at the inner core stays solid because of the incredible pressure surrounding it. Around 22°C Upper Mantle Lower Mantle Outer Core Inner Core 1,400°C – 3,000°C 3,000°C 4,000°C – 6,000°C 5,000°C - 6,000°C Why is the Earth’s core so hot? There are three main sources of heat in the deep earth: (1) heat from when the planet formed and accreted, which has not yet been lost; (2) frictional heating, caused by denser core material sinking to the center of the planet; and (3) heat from the decay of radioactive elements. 1. The lithosphere is: The lithosphere is the solid and rigid outer layer of our planet. It includes the crust and part of the upper mantle that contains rigid rocks. Beneath this layer is the asthenosphere where the rocks in this part of the upper mantle are not rigid. The rocks can flow like a liquid or break apart similar to silly putty. 2. The asthenosphere is: The asthenosphere is the layer of the Earth that lies below the lithosphere. It is a layer of solid rock that has so much pressure and heat the rocks can flow like a liquid. The rocks are less dense than the rocks in the lithosphere. This allows the tectonic plates in the lithosphere to move around on the Earth's surface by "floating" on the rocks that are slowly flowing like a liquid.