* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download The Living Planet PPT
Overdeepening wikipedia , lookup
History of geomagnetism wikipedia , lookup
Spherical Earth wikipedia , lookup
Surface runoff wikipedia , lookup
Water pollution wikipedia , lookup
Post-glacial rebound wikipedia , lookup
Large igneous province wikipedia , lookup
Global Energy and Water Cycle Experiment wikipedia , lookup
Physical oceanography wikipedia , lookup
Plate tectonics wikipedia , lookup
Age of the Earth wikipedia , lookup
History of Earth wikipedia , lookup
History of geology wikipedia , lookup
Geomorphology wikipedia , lookup
A Living Planet The Solar System Consists of the sun and nine planets and other celestial bodies –Comets: spheres of ice and dust –Asteroids: large chunks of rocky material The Structure of the Earth Earth has 3 layers –Core: iron and nickel –Mantle: magma –Crust: thin layer of rock The Structure of the Earth Atmosphere: layer of gases Lithosphere: includes crust and upper mantle – Forms ocean floor – Forms 7 continents: Asia, Africa, North America, South America, Europe, Australia, Antartica Hydrosphere: water elements of earth Biosphere: where plants and animals live The Structure of the Earth Continental Drift Theory –Earth was once a supercontinent that divided and slowly drifted apart over millions of years Bodies of Water Oceans and Seas – Covers 71% of earth – Pacific Ocean, Atlantic Ocean, Indian Ocean, Artic Ocean – Circulates through 3 basic motions Currents: like rivers in ocean Waves: swells or ridges produced by wind Tides: created by gravitational pull of moon or sun Bodies of Water Hydrologic Cycle –The continuous circulation of water between the atmosphere, the oceans, and the earth Bodies of Water Lakes – Hold more than 95% of earth’s fresh water supply – Salt water lakes Rivers and streams – Flow through channels and move water to or from larger bodies of water – Drainage basin: are drained by major river Bodies of Water Ground Water –Water held in pores of rock –Water table: level at which rock is saturated Can change depending on amount of precipitation Landforms Naturally formed features on the surface of the earth – Volcano – Strait – Island – Delta – Marsh – Oasis – Flood plain – Bay -Plateau -Mesa -Prairie -Steppe -Valley -Canyon -River mouth -Harbor -Cataract -Glacier -Cliff -Mountain -Butte -Swamp -Cape -Sea level Landforms Oceanic landforms: –Continental shelf: earth’s surface from edge of a continent to deep part of the ocean –Ridges: places where new crust is being formed on edges of tectonic plates –Islands: formed by volcanic action, deposits of sand, or deposits of coral skeletons Landforms Continental landforms – Relief: the difference in elevation of a landform from its lowest point to its highest point Mountains, hills, plains, plateaus – Topography: the combination of the surface shape and composition of the landforms and their distribution in a region Internal Forces Shaping the Earth Plate tectonics Earthquakes Volcanoes Plate Tectonics Tectonic Plates: enormous moving pieces of the earth’s lithosphere – Move in 1 of 4 ways Spreading or moving apart Subduction or diving under another plate Collision or crashing into one another Sliding past each other in a shearing movement Plate Tectonics 3 types of boundaries mark plate movement – Divergent boundary: move apart horizontally – Convergent boundary: plates collide; one goes under the other or both plates crumble – Transform boundary: plates slide past one another – Fault: fracture in the earth’s crust Volcanoes Crack in earth’s surface where magma, gases, and water from the lower part of the mantle pour out Lava: magma that has reached earth’s surface Volcanoes Ring of Fire – Zone around rim of the Pacific Ocean – Eight major plates meet here – Volcanic action and earthquakes often occur – Hot springs and geysers Earthquakes Violent movement of the earth Occurs when plates slide past each other at a fault Seismograph: detects earthquakes Earthquakes Location – Focus: where earthquake begins – Epicenter: directly above focus on the earth’s surface Damage – Richter Scale: relative strength of earthquake Tsunami – Giant wave in ocean External Forces Shaping the Earth Weathering Erosion Building soil Weathering Physical and chemical processes that change the characteristics of rock on or near the earth’s surface Creates sediment; smaller pieces of rock –Mud, sand, silt Weathering Mechanical weathering: processes that break rock into smaller pieces –Does not change composition of rock –Frost, plant roots, human activity Weathering Chemical weathering: rock is changed into a new substance as a result of interaction between elements in the air or water and minerals in the rock –Iron rusting, acid rain –Occurs more in warm, moist climates Erosion Occurs when weathered material is moved by the action of wind, water, ice or gravity Transporting agent must be present Erosion Water erosion –Water flows in streams or rivers Erode vertically and horizontally Delta: fan-like landform that occurs when a river enters the ocean –Wave action along coastline Can reduce or increase beaches Erosion Wind erosion –Transports and deposits material in other locations –New landforms may be produced Sand dunes –Loess Wind blown silt and clay sediment that produce very fertile soil Erosion Glacial erosion –Glacier: large, long-lasting mass of ice that moves because of gravity –Glaciation: the changing of landforms by slowly moving glaciers –Moraine: when rocks left behind by a glacier form a ridge or hill Building Soil Soil: loose mixture of weathered rock, organic matter (humus), air and water Soil factors –Parent material –Relief –Organisms –Climate –Time