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Geography Revision Do we have to? 1 The things to do Three topics only Changing Earth ( Earthquakes + oceans) Working world (economic activity + tourism) Fragile environments (Climate change, acid rain, energy sources, rubbish) PLUS Map question Keyword section 2 Any question I ask will have the answers in the ‘notes’ section under the slide if you open to see Changing earth The structure of the earth and earthquakes 3 A thin crust - 10100km thick and not very dense The Structure of the Earth A mantle – extends almost halfway to the centre, hot and dense A core – made of molten nickel and iron. Outer part is liquid and inner part is solid. Gets hot due to radioactive decay. The crust is made up of pieces – what are they called? 4 The convection currents in the mantle force the plates to move 5 Now this is a strange looking map What is happening and what is the name of the theory? 6 7 Plate Margins For each one, explain what is happening, and why it has its name. The 4 examples we talked about were the Mid-Atlantic ridge, the Himalayas, the San Andreas Fault and the Andes. Which of these places go with each types of plate margins? What can happen along any of these faults? (not pleasant!) 8 So what happens when there is an earthquake? Most earthquakes happen near the boundaries of tectonic plates, both where the plates spread apart and where they crunch or grind together But large temblors also strike from time to time in the normally stable interior of continents. Movement of body waves away from the focus of the earthquake. The epicentre is the location on the surface directly above the earthquake's focus. 9 How big it is, can be measured … .. using a seismograph. The amount it shakes is measured on the Richter scale 1 – 3.5: you would no be able to feel, even it was quite close by – but it would show up on a seismograph 3.6 – 6: you would feel it, but it is unlikely to do much damage 6.0 – 6.9: can be fairly destructive up to 100km 7 -7.9: Major earthquake can be very damaging – e.g. Haiti and New Zealand 8 +:Great earthquake. Causes serious damage of 100s of km. Japan 8.9 10 There are 2 types of waves in an earthquake Body waves and surface waves. Body waves travel outward in all directions, including downward, from the quake's focus -- that is, the particular spot where the fault first began to rupture. Surface waves, by contrast, are confined to the upper few hundred miles of the crust. They travel parallel to the surface, like ripples on the surface of a pond. They are also slower than body waves. 11 This what it would be like … ..the body waves (P-wave) strike first and are the fastest kind. People often report a sound like a train just before they feel a quake, which is the P-wave moving as an acoustic wave in the air. Then the secondary, or S-waves, arrive. A person in a building perceives the arrival of S-waves as a sudden powerful jolt, as if a giant has pounded his fist down on the roof. Finally, the surface waves strike. In very strong earthquakes, the up-and-down and back-and-forth motions caused by surface waves can make the ground appear to roll like the surface of the ocean, and can literally topple buildings over. 12 What kind of damage can be done? Look what the surface waves and body waves did! The whole earth moved 5 metres in 1906 in San Francisco Mudslides 13 What is this a picture of from Japan this year? 14 So you are in an earthquake zone – and you do not want to move away, so what can you do to stay safe? 1. Make sure the building you are in are well built, to withstand earthquakes as well as possible 2. Have a personal plan 15 Movement is earthquakes is of 2 types, up-anddown and side-to-side. Most reasonable strong building can cope with the first. It is the 2nd that brings challenges! The Buildings 16 On a personal level Don’t leave bookcase just standing against the wall – screw them into it. Make sure cupboards have safety catches on them – even a small earthquake can make a big mess (or even a dangerous one, in the case of bleach or weed killer) if the bottles tumble out onto the floor and smash. Identify safe places indoors and out – places where glass will not fall on top of you for example – in doorways, under heavy tables etc Practice what do. Have an emergency contact plan. Have emergency supplies in a secure – if possible metal – container – e.g passports, birth certificates, money, batteries, torch etc Do check out http://www.fema.gov/plan/prevent/earthquake/prepar edness_home.shtm#1 17 What am I talking about? Body waves Collision plate Conservative plate Constructive plate Continental drift Convection current Core Crust Destructive plate Epicentre Focus Mantle Plates Richter scale Seismograph Surface waves Tsunami 18 The coast The processes that change the environment and what is happening to the coasts 19 There are 3 processes at work I am using my hammer to wear away this rock Erosion I am carrying away the pieces Transportation I cannot carry them any further so I drop them Deposition 20 Erosion is carried out in a number of ways Can you work out what each word means? Attrition? Solution? Hydraulic action? Abrasion? ACTION CORROSION 21 I know this is river transportation – but the seas are the same Here are the 4 ways in which the load – the material the waves are moving from one place to another – is transported. Learn these words and meanings 22 Deposition A waves drop their load when the speed or volume of the waves decrease. The load, which it carries, is deposited. The heavier material is deposited first and the finer material carried further. Deposition is likely to occur when: – waves enter an area of shallow water – waves enter a sheltered area – there is little wind 23 What features can erosion make? How easily a coast is eroded depends on how hard the rock is Headlands and Bay! All the varieties of erosion figure here. Anyone want to have a go at explaining how one does it? Notice the darker patch in the bay in the last picture – what could that be? 24 How cliffs are eroded The tougher rocks of the headlands are gradually eroded away by all the methods of erosion and gradually a small ‘Wave-cut notch’ is made by the waves at high tide As it gets bigger, the overhanging rock will eventually tumble into the sea. Over time the cliff retreats leaving a wave-cut platform just below the surface, that shows only when the tide is out This is in Dorset near Purbeck at Kimmeridge Bay. 25 This is an arch in limestone – which was the main way in which it was eroded? 1. A large crack opened up 3. The cave gets bigger 2. The crack grows into a cave 5. The arch is eroded and collapses 4. The cave breaks through the head land to make an arch 3. This is eroded to form a stump 3. This leaves a tall stack 26 What happens next? Once the rock has been eroded away from the cliff by abrasion and corrosion and hydraulic action The pieces will be further broken down by attrition, becoming smoother and smaller over time Some of it will be transported away and deposited somewhere else Broken rock ends up on beaches as sand or shingle (round pebbles) But beaches do not stay the same Most of the waves break on the beaches at an angle. Some of the waves are constructive, which means they bring material from another place and leave it. These waves are swash waves – quiet little waves that drop anything they are carrying as they break These make beaches bigger. 27 Some of the waves are destructive, which means that they break on the beach and as the water runs back, it drags part of the beach away with it. These waves are backwash waves – big waves that make more noise as they retreat, taking the sand and shingle with them. These make beaches smaller. 28 Some waves are a bit of both. This is called longshore drift 29 This can lead to the formation of a spit 30 What with rising sea levels (climate change) and coastal erosion, some coasts are disappearing fast. So we have to have ways of trying control at least some of our coastlines if whole towns are not to disappear under the waves! There 2 groups of methods – hard engineering -These solutions generally involve concrete, metal, stone and other hard wearing materials that are intended to stop erosion and take little account of the environment. Soft Engineering These methods try not to disrupt the environment and tend to be used where the environment is more important than say a town or road. 31 Are these hard or soft? Do you know what they are called? What these for? What do you think they have done here? Why? 32 Are these hard or soft? Do you know what they are called? What is happening here? What is this for? 33 There are others .. Revetments, Gabions Riprap 34 What am I talking about Erosion Transportation Deposition Attrition Corrosion Hydraulic action Abrasion Suspension Solution Traction Saltation Load Headlands Wave cut notch Wave cut platform Arch Stack Stump constructive waves Swash wave destructive wave Backwash wave Longshore drift Spit Hard engineering Soft engineering Replenishment Revetments Gabions Riprap 35