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Teacher’s Toolbox INSTRUCTIONAL PLANS Suggested for Beginning of Year Review Earth Science Toolbox for Eighth Grade Created by Michigan Teachers for Michigan Students St. Clair County Regional Educational Service Agency 499 Range Road PO Box 1500 Marysville, Michigan 48040 Phone: 810/364-8990 Fax: 810/364-7474 www.sccresa.org "These materials are produced by St. Clair County Regional Educational Service Agency and are not authorized by the Michigan Department of Education. Please use these materials within the guidelines of the Office of Educational Assessment and Accountability (OEAA) of the Michigan Department Education. These guidelines can be found at: http://www.michigan.gov/documents/Prof_Assessmt_Practices_108570_7.pdf " Eighth Grade Earth Science Toolbox Table of Contents Letter of Introduction .......................................................................................................... 2 Important Notices ............................................................................................................... 3 How to Read a Lesson Plan ............................................................................................... 5 Web Resources .................................................................................................................. 7 Overview Earth Science Toolbox ....................................................................................... 8 Lesson 1: The Earth is Made of Rocks............................................................................... 9 Lesson 2: Soil ................................................................................................................... 13 Lesson 3: Sandstone Formation ...................................................................................... 17 Lesson 4: Landforms and Topographic Maps .................................................................. 23 Lesson 5: Water Movement and Groundwater ................................................................. 33 Lesson 6: Weather ........................................................................................................... 41 Lesson 7: Phases of the Moon and Eclipses .................................................................... 51 Lesson 8: Seasons ........................................................................................................... 56 Lesson 9: Comparing Earth to Other Planets ................................................................... 59 8th Grade Earth Science Vocabulary ................................................................................ 61 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 1 Letter of Introduction Dear Educators, While creating this toolbox, we spent a great deal of time worrying. We worried about: devoting enough time to reviewing the benchmarks taught in previous grades; being developmentally appropriate; including just the right amount of best practice instructional activities; incorporating to, with, and by into the Day-by-Day lesson plans; interpreting and aligning the Benchmarks accurately; making the lessons interesting and motivating; and addressing the teaching and learning standards within the lessons. We worried about everything, so you wouldn’t have to worry. We know teaching is a difficult profession at best and even more difficult when faced with increased academic standards and content expectations. We wanted to help you through this transition period by providing this easyto-use model designed to prepare Michigan’s students for future statewide assessments. We realize we are providing a way for you to prepare your students for the MEAP. We also understand the best way for students to prepare for the MEAP is through excellent instruction aligned to a carefully designed curriculum. With changing content expectations and statewide assessments, it has been challenging for schools and districts to keep pace. We offer this Toolbox in light of the previous statements. We hope you will find, within these day-by-day lesson plans, instructional strategies, and pedagogical ideas you can use everyday of the school year. If you do, we have done our job. It means we have created more than MEAP preparation materials. It means we have influenced your instruction and possibly your curriculum. St. Clair County teachers created this Toolbox for use by Michigan teachers with Michigan students. It was a time consuming effort we hope other teachers find useful and will appreciate. We would like to extend a special thanks to Autumn McClellan, a 2005 graduate of Yale High School, for her help in the production of the Bell in a Jar video. Sincerely, Eighth Grade Toolbox Team Monica Hartman - St. Clair RESA Marea Sherwood, Crystal Harris - St. Clair RESA Steven Hunt, Julie McDowell -Yale Public Schools Michael Larzelere - Port Huron Area School District Kathy Lentz - Capac Community Schools Mike Maison, Jason Letkiewicz - St. Clair RESA Glen McBride – Marysville School District Barbara Smith – East-China School District Tracie Stubbs - Algonac Community Schools 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 2 Important Notices Michigan Curriculum Framework: Science Benchmarks The science toolboxes are a suggested review at the beginning of the year for Michigan’s eighth grade students. Our emphasis is placed on the constructing and reflecting benchmarks. We embed them in the Physical, Earth and Life Science content standards of the Michigan Curriculum Framework. Use of these toolboxes does not guarantee all benchmarks have been addressed. The benchmarks chosen are the ones that are among the bigger ideas in science or the ones that seem to be more difficult for many students. The lessons are designed to make use of the “to”, “with”, and “by” format. First, you model the skills and strategies for your students. Modeling means explicitly showing how the skill or strategy is completed and all the thinking that goes on during its completion. Second, you help your students practice the skills and strategies. This help can be whole class, small group, or individual guidance. Third, you let your students complete the skills and strategies on their own. This format starts on the first day. Model the inquiry process. Think aloud as you ask the investigation question, make a prediction, graph data, interpret results and draw a conclusion. In the lessons that follow, students will be given opportunities to practice these skills with less and less intervention until they can do them on their own. Each daily lesson is designed to engage the students for the full science period of 50-60 minutes. However, depending on the students’ prior experiences, some lessons may require more time. This Toolbox is designed as a review of content taught in fifth through seventh grade. During instruction, it is important for students to participate in the handson activity. In the Toolbox, however, the students are not doing the investigations themselves. Rather they are graphing, analyzing, and interpreting data collected by the project teachers or their students. This is not the best way to teach science, but given the time constraints of fifteen days, this is the format we chose. In a few cases, pictures and videos were made of the data collection. The video clips are provided on a separate CD. We invite teachers to extend the full investigation to their students, when time permits. Use your professional judgment and consider the needs of your students. We hope that some of the ideas presented will be springboards to further inquiry projects after the review period. We look forward to your suggestions and feedback. 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 3 Children do not learn by doing. They learn by thinking, discussing, and reflecting on what they have done. 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 4 How to Read a Lesson Plan Identifies lesson focus and lists the topics for the lesson Lesson Focus Lesson 2 Using Physical Science Matter Step-by-step instructions for lesson delivery Benchmark clarification with key concepts and real-world contexts Lesson description and management Key Question to drive the inquiry Procedures to follow Lesson 2: Arrangement and Motion of Molecules molecule Describe the arrangement and motion of molecules in solids, liquids, and gases. Key concepts: Arrangement—regular pattern, random. Distance between molecules—closely packed, separated. Molecular motion— vibrating, bumping together, moving freely Real-world contexts: Common solids, liquids, and gases, such as those listed above. motion Materials LESSON During the elementary grades, students study the visible properties of solids, liquids and gases. In the middle school, students learn the molecular properties. In this lesson, students are asked to draw a picture of molecules in a flask filled with air and again, after the air is removed. The big ideas in this lesson are 1) all matter is made of particles that have mass and take up space; 2) the particles are evenly distributed, and 3) the molecules in matter are always moving. These ideas are difficult for students because you cannot see atoms and molecules. It is especially difficult for students to understand that molecules in a solid are moving. KEY QUESTION How can you best represent air particles before and after most of the air in a flask is removed by a vacuum pump? PROCEDURE 1. 2. 3. Additional Resources Vocabulary IV.1.M.4 Using Physical Science Knowledge 4. Students complete Journal page 6 independently. While students are working, walk around the room, looking for students who may still hold naïve ideas. Compare students’ ideas with the scientific ones. Read the text, Solids, Liquids, and Gases, from the Student Journal page 7 with the class. Pass out copies of the rubric from page 17 in the Teachers’ Toolbox to the students and discuss them with the class. This rubric includes the big ideas that are needed for the explanation and drawing of the air molecules in the flask. Give students time to read the anonymous student work included in the Teachers’ Toolbox on pages 20 - 24 individually. Student Journal pages 6-8. Indicates scientific vocabulary needed to understand the benchmark and lesson Transparencie s of student page 6 Make transparencies of the anonymous student work on pages 20 24 from the Teachers’ Toolbox and/or make paper copies for each student. Make copies of scoring rubric, Teachers Toolbox page 17, for each student. Note: There are two rubrics on each page. Indicates everything you need to prepare for the lesson and activities RESOURCES 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 5 Materials Needed for Lesson Activities Student Journals – All days Special materials listed below Lesson 1 Hot plate Safety goggles Tongs Pocket pencil/crayon sharpener Vise (optional) For each group 8 crayons - 2 each of four different colors newspaper aluminum foil (30 cm square) Two pieces of 2 x 4 lumber about 10 inches long Lesson 3 Paper copies for students or a transparency for an overhead projector of the scoring rubric on teachers’ page 20 Paper copies of anonymous student work from teachers’ pages 21-22; one per student pair. Transparency of anonymous student work from teachers’ pages 21-22. Lesson 4 Color transparencies of Teacher pages 31 and 32 Casserole dish, plastic storage containers such as Gladware, Ziploc, or dish with high sides (about 4-5 inches) that can hold water for each group (one per group) Plastic cups or bowls (one per group) or clay (about 2 sticks per group) Blank transparency for each group to fit over the container Overhead/wet erase pens Centimeter Rulers Colored Pencils Lesson 5 Colored Pencils Lesson 6 Colored Pencils Lesson 7 Small Styrofoam balls (about 2 inch); one for each student Barbecue skewers or pencils Lamp without a shade Extension cord for lamp to reach center of the room Lesson 8 Data projector, monitor, or computers to show web site visualization models 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 6 Web Resources National Science Teachers Association: Science Links http://www.scilinks.org/ Members can search by Keywords. Students and guest teachers can enter the codes found in their textbooks or other publications. The codes listed here are from these references: Smith, P. S., & Ford, B. A. (2001). Project Earth Science: Meteorology (Second ed.). Arlington, VA: NSTA Press. Ford, B. A. (2001). Project Earth Science: Geology. Arlington, VA: NSTA Press. Smith, P.S. (2001). Project Earth Science: Astronomy. Arlington, VA: NSTA Press. Use these codes at the SciLinks website for these listed topics found in this Toolbox: Volcanoes – PESG101 Magma, lava – PESG111 Rocks – PESG163 Rock Cycle – PESG140 Rock Formations – PESG149 Earth’s layers – PESG31 Plate tectonics – PESG41 Ocean floor – PESG83 Ring of Fire – PESG119 Atmosphere – PESM163 Ozone – PESM170 Air Pollution – PESM174 Weather and Energy – PESM178 Greenhouse Effect – PESM186 Acid Rain – PESM190 Severe Weather – PESM200 Solar System – PESA29 Seasons – PESA84 Moon Phases – PESA92 Earth Science from Schools from Moorland School http://www.moorlandschool.co.uk/earth/ Includes these topics: Earth Origin Earth Structure Plate Tectonics Rock Cycle Volcanoes and Earthquakes Earth's Atmosphere Fossil Fuels Annenberg Videos Essential Earth Science for Teachers: Earth and Space Science This is a series of 8 one-hour videos on Earth Science topics. This is an excellent review of the science content for teaching. http://www.learner.org/resources/series195.html National Geographic Marco Polo X-peditions http://www.nationalgeographic.com/xpeditions/ U.S. Geological Survey http://www.usgs.gov/ USGS for Educational Resources http://education.usgs.gov/ Source for Topography Maps http://www.topozone.com/ 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 7 Overview Earth Science Toolbox Lesson 1 Geosphere Rock Cycle Explain how rocks are formed Lesson 2 Describe the composition and characteristics of the atmosphere. Explain the behavior of water in the atmosphere. Lesson 5 Geosphere Hydrosphere Soil Sandstone Formation Explain how rocks are broken down, soil is formed, and how surface features change Analyzing characteristics of student writing for a constructed response Landforms and Topographic Maps Water Movement and Groundwater Describe and identify surface features using maps Describe how water in Michigan reaches the ocean and returns. Lesson 7 Explain how rocks are broken down, soil is formed, and how surface features change Solar System, Galaxy, and Universe Phases of the Moon and Eclipses Seasons and Other Planets Describe, compare, and explain the motions of solar system objects. Compare the earth to other planets and moons in terms of supporting life. Describe and explain common observations of the night skies. Describe, compare, and explain the motions of solar system objects. 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox Explain how water exists below the earth’s surface and how it is replenished. Lesson 8 Solar System, Galaxy, and Universe Weather Explain patterns of changing weather and how they are measured. Lesson 4 Geosphere Lesson 6 Atmosphere and Weather Lesson 3 Geosphere St. Clair County RESA 2006 8 Lesson 1 Lesson Focus Using Earth Science Geosphere Lesson 1: The Earth is Made of Rocks Vocabulary igneous rock V.1.M.2 Using Earth Science Knowledge metamorphic rock Explain how rocks are formed Key concepts: Rock cycle processes – melting and cooling (igneous rocks); heat and pressure (metamorphic rocks); cementing and crystallization of sediments (sedimentary rocks); minerals; heat source is interior of Earth. Materials – silt, clay, gravel, sand, rock, lava, magma, remains of living things (bones, shells, plants). Real-world contexts: Physical environments where rocks are being formed; volcanoes; depositional environments such as ocean floor, deltas, beaches, swamps; metamorphic environments deep within the earth’s crust. sedimentary rock LESSON In this lesson, students will observe a simulation of the rock cycle using crayon shavings to represent the rocks. This can be done as a teacher demonstration or with small groups of students. The hot plate can be shared, if necessary. The procedure, as described, will be for small groups of students. The informational text can be assigned for independent work or for homework, depending on the needs of the students. This activity is adapted from Project Earth Science: Geology published by NSTA Press. The important ideas for students to understand about rocks are: The rock cycle occurs slowly over geological time. Since it happens so slowly, people don’t notice it. Mechanical and chemical weathering break down rocks at the surface of the Earth Igneous rocks form when magma cools Sedimentary rocks form by the compaction of rock fragments beneath Earth’s surface Metamorphic rocks are formed by the extreme pressure that is found usually where plates are converging KEY QUESTION How are rocks formed? PROCEDURE 1. Students share what they know about the rock cycle. This can be done within their small group or with the whole class. 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 mineral crystallization silt clay gravel sand lava magma erosion Materials Student Journal pages 2-3 Hot plate Safety goggles Tongs Pocket pencil/crayon sharpener Vise (optional) For each group 8 crayons - 2 each of four different colors newspaper aluminum foil (30 cm square) Two pieces of 2 x 4 lumber about 10 inches long 9 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Tell students they will simulate the rock cycle processes with the crayon shavings. Student tables should be covered with newspaper. Cover the hot plate burner with aluminum foil. Students shave their crayons, keeping all the shavings for each color in its own pile. Ask the students: If crayons represent rocks, what part of the rock cycle is simulated by shaving the crayons? (weathering) 7. Fold the 30 cm square piece of foil in half to form a rectangle. Place one color of rock fragments (crayon shavings) in the center of the foil. Spread the shavings so they are in a square layer about 1 cm thick. 8. Carefully spread another color of crayon shavings on top of the first layer forming a second layer. Continue with layering the crayon shavings until there are four layers. Ask the students what this represents in the rock cycle. (Deposition of rock layers as sediment) 9. Carefully fold the aluminum foil over the four layers of shavings, but not tightly. Leave a gap of about a cm around all the edges. 10. Place the foil wrapped crayon shavings between the two boards and place them on the floor. Press on the boards with your hands. What part of the rock cycle does this represent? (This is like how sedimentary rock is formed. Pressing on the rock layers with your hands is like the compaction of rock sediment by the layers above it) 11. Carefully open the foil package and observe the rocks. Carefully, break the rock into two pieces. If there are loose fragments, save them. 12. Put the two pieces back into the aluminum foil and wrap them as before. Place between the two boards, but this time use a vise or step on the boards to apply more pressure than before. 13. Open the foil package and observe. What part of the rock cycle does this represent? (Increased pressure and heat that forms metamorphic rock) This next part can be demonstrated by the teacher: 14. Fold another 30 cm square sheet of aluminum foil into a bowl-shape large enough to place the crayon shavings. 15. Using safety goggles and a lab apron, melt the crayon on the hot plate at a medium setting. Be careful to melt the crayon slowly enough to avoid spattering. Stop before the fragments are completely fused together. 16. Turn off the hot plate. Carefully remove the foil packet from the hot plate with the tongs and let it cool for about ten minutes. What part of the rock cycle does this step represent? (Melting of rock and it becomes magma. Then it cools and forms igneous rock) 17. After students have a chance to read the informational text in their student journals, discuss how the simulation with crayons is similar to the the rock cycle and how it is different. 18. Be sure students also understand the difference between erosion and weathering. RESOURCES Introduction to Plate Tectonics: Layers of the Earth http://volcano.und.nodak.edu/vwdocs/vwlessons/plate_tectonics/part1.html The Rock Cycle: After students read about rocks at this web page, they can take a little rock test. http://www.moorlandschool.co.uk/earth/rockcycle.htm The Rock Cycle http://www.minsocam.org/MSA/K12/rkcycle/rkcycleindex.html Ford, B. A. (2001). Project Earth Science: Geology. Arlington, VA: NSTA Press Ford, B. A. (2001). Project Earth Science: Geology. Arlington, VA: NSTA Press 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 10 Name ___________________________________________ Earth Science Lesson 1 The purpose for reading this selection is to be able to explain how rocks are formed. Be sure to be able to explain the constructive forces that combine to form rock materials as well as the destructive forces that combine to break them down. The Earth is Made of Rocks Thousands of different types of rocks and minerals have been found on Earth. Most rocks at the Earth's surface are formed from only eight elements: oxygen, silicon, aluminum, iron, magnesium, calcium, potassium, and sodium. These elements are combined in a number of ways to make rocks that are very different. Rocks are divided into three basic types, igneous, sedimentary and metamorphic, depending upon how they were formed. Igneous rocks form when melted rock from deep within the Earth cools and becomes solid. The chemical composition of the magma and cooling rate determine the type of igneous rock it becomes. Sedimentary rocks are formed from pre-existing rocks. Weathering breaks rocks into smaller bits and pieces. Wind, water, and ice carry these pieces and deposit them and they accumulate in layers on the Earth’s surface. Metamorphic rocks form when rocks are subjected to high heat and pressure. The heat and pressure substantially changes them from their original form. The Rock Cycle The Earth’s crust is made of huge chunks of land called plates. There are seven major plates and lots of little ones. They move around very slowly. When plates shift, pull apart, or push together, mountains are formed. Of course this takes a very long period of time. The movement of these plates is called plate tectonics. The plate tectonics theory provides an explanation for how rocks are recycled from igneous to sedimentary to metamorphic and back to igneous again. The movement of these plates results in intense heat and pressure. Some rocks get pushed deep into the Earth and melt. The melted rock is called magma. When magma cools and hardens, it forms igneous rock. If the magma cools and hardens slowly underground, large crystals are formed and the rock is called intrusive igneous rock. If the magma cools quickly, perhaps after erupting from a volcano, small crystals are formed and the rock is called extrusive igneous rock. On the surface, weathering breaks rocks into bits and pieces and erosion carries them away. These bits of rock are deposited on the Earth’s surface, often under water. Over time, many layers accumulate, creating pressure and heat. Salts that are present in the sediment crystallize as water is squeezed out of the layers. This helps to cement the particles of sediment together making sedimentary rock. The very intense heat and pressure resulting form the moving plates can also form metamorphic rock. Metamorphic rocks form when sedimentary, igneous, or other 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 11 metamorphic rocks undergo a change in crystal structure and texture from the heat and pressure of the moving plates. Metamorphic rock is not formed from rock that has melted. Remember melted rocks form magma, which then becomes igneous rock when it cools. This cycle has continued over the ages, constantly forming new rocks, breaking those down in various ways, and forming still younger rocks. Weathering and Erosion Mountains wear down from the processes of weathering and erosion. What's the difference between weathering and erosion? Weathering involves two processes that often work together to decompose rocks, chemical and mechanical. Mechanical weathering involves physically breaking rocks into fragments without changing the chemical make-up of the minerals within it. This can happen when energy from the sun causes the heating and cooling of Earth’s surface. When water gets into cracks and then freezes, it expands and breaks the rock into smaller pieces. Water in the form of glaciers is another mechanical weathering agent. Tree roots is another weathering agent that can cause rock to crumble. Chemical weathering involves a chemical change in at least some of the minerals within a rock. Rock is broken into smaller pieces by chemical reactions. Acid rain can cause chemical weathering. Plants can cause chemical weathering as well as mechanical weathering. Roots produce chemicals that can break up rocks. Lichens also help to break down rocks. They can live on bare rock and survive extremes of heat, cold, and drought. They are one of the first living organisms that can be found after a volcanic eruption. Erosion Once the rock is broken down into smaller bits, it has to move somehow. Wind, water, or ice can move rock particles. Through time, erosion gradually carves canyons into mountainous areas. The greater the flow of water, the greater the erosive force. Streams with steep sides can move more material. The churning action of flood waters with sediment and debris pulverize rocks into fragments that make soil; gravel, sand, silt, and clay. Plants typically cover the landscape and hold the soil together. This helps to prevent erosion. But when a particularly long-slow drenching rain occurs, the mountain slopes become saturated. The added weight causes rock falls, landslides, and other forms of mass movement of material down slope. Weathering and erosion are part of the destructive forces that combine to break down rocks. Weathering breaks them down and erosion moves them. 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox 12 St. Clair County RESA 2006 SP3 Lesson 2 Lesson Focus Using Earth Science Geosphere Lesson 2: Soil Vocabulary V.1.M.3 Using Earth Science Knowledge mineral Explain how rocks are broken down, how soil is formed and how surface features changes. Key concepts: Chemical and mechanical weathering; erosion by glaciers, water, wind, and down slope movement; decomposition, humus Real-world contexts: Regions in Michigan where erosion by wind, water, or glaciers may have occurred such as river valleys, gullies, shoreline of Great lakes; chemical weathering from acid rain, formation of caves, caverns, sink holes; physical weathering, frost action such as pot holes and crack in sidewalks; plant roots by bacteria, fungi, worms, rodents, other animals silt clay chemical weathering mechanical weathering erosion decomposition LESSON This lesson continues to develop the concepts about rocks by focusing on how rocks are broken down to form soil. Building on the weathering process from Lesson 1, students read about the characteristics of different kinds of soil and the importance of living things that is necessary to make the rock form soil. KEY QUESTION How is soil formed? PROCEDURE 1. Students will use the pair/share reading strategy for the informational text on this page. For this strategy, a student with lower reading skills can be paired with a student who has higher reading skills. Pair all students 2. Students take turns reading the paragraphs. While one student is reading aloud, the other student is listening. After the paragraph is read, the student who was listening shares the main idea with the student who was reading. Likewise, the student who was reading shares what he/she thinks is the main idea. The roles switch for the next paragraph. Continue until the entire selection is read. 3. Students complete the table and the graphic organizer together. 4. If there is time, assign page 7- Sandstone Formation to be completed independently. Materials Student Journal pages 4-6 RESOURCES The Dirt on Soil http://volcano.und.nodak.edu/vwdocs/vwlessons/plate_tectonics/part1.html 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 13 Name ___________________________________________ Earth Science Lesson 2 Soil Soil is more than rock particles. It includes all the living things and the materials they make or change. Living things don’t just have a home in the soil. Living things actually made the soil, as we know it. Without life, there is no soil. Mars and Venus have plenty of rocks. Mars has windstorms that erode rocks into dust. Venus has an acidic atmosphere that chemically changes rocks, but there is no soil on those planets. Every soil type is a mixture of sand, silt, clay, and organic matter. Components of Soil Soil Particle Gravel Sand Silt Clay Size Larger than 2mm 2mm to 0.05 mm 0.05 mm to 0.002 mm Less than 0.002 mm Description Coarse Gritty Flour-like Sticky when wet Soils with a lot of sand have big spaces between the particles. They don't hold water or nutrients. Sandy soils don't stick together very well. The roots of plants can't hold onto this soil, but the big spaces do allow air into the soil. Some plants are able to grow in sandy topsoil by putting their roots deep through the sand to the subsoil. Silt is finer than sand, but it still feels gritty. Silt is commonly found in floodplains and is what makes mud. Soils with a lot of silt make excellent farmland, but the silt erodes easily. This is the kind of soil that is blown away in dust storms and carried down stream in floods. Clay makes the soil heavy and dense. The spaces between soil particles in clay are very tiny. When clay soil is dry, it's almost as hard as concrete. Plant roots can't push through it. No air can get in from the surface. Most bacteria and other soil organisms that need oxygen can't breathe. But clay is important because it can change the soil chemistry. Clays give off minerals and absorb acids. The perfect soil for plants and soil organisms has about the same amount of sand and silt, plus a small amount of clay. This soil has enough large and small spaces for air and water to flow. It also has enough clay that helps it stick together and hold humus. These clumps make space for plant roots to grow. This perfect kind of soil is called loam or topsoil. Making Living Soil To make soil, start with a fresh lava flow, a solid granite dome, or some limestone. When weathered or broken down, these will become the parent material that will start 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 SP4 14 the soil making process. The next step is physical weathering. Break some of the parent material into pieces. Use a glacier to grind off big boulders and fine sediment. Wind or running water work great to make small mineral particles. The next step is chemical weathering. Chemical weathering changes some of the parent material and the mineral particles into other kinds of minerals. When it rains, water falling on the limestone dissolves it. This makes the water more acidic. Expose fresh rock with iron in it to the air to oxidize the rock. Finally, add the actions of living things. Start with lichens. Then throw in the microscopic decomposers like bacteria, fungi, and protozoa. They all make humus out of dead organic matter. They also turn minerals from the parent material into nutrients that plants can use. Pretty soon you'll have enough humus for plants to begin growing. Instead of being just dust or sand, your soil will clump together. Water will stay longer instead of draining away. Add tiny arthropods like mites and springtails. They'll pass the organic matter from the plants on to the smaller decomposers. Don't forget to add some larger animals like earthworms, moles, and gophers. They'll loosen the top layer and stir air in for you. Add rain regularly as needed. Now you've got living, breathing soil. 1. Use the information in the text to fill in the chart below. Advantages and Disadvantages of Different Soil Types Soil Type Sand Description Advantage Disadvantage Has big spaces between particles Big air spaces allow air to get into soil Doesn’t hold water Plant roots can’t hold onto soil Soil doesn’t stick together Silt Finer than sand but still gritty Makes excellent farmland Erodes easily by wind or water Clay Heavy and dense Clay can change soil chemistry by giving off minerals and absorbing acids Spaces between particles are very tiny It’s very hard when dry Plant roots can’t push through it Air from the surface can’t get in it so organisms that need oxygen can’t breathe Loam or Topsoil Has about equal amounts of sand and silt with some clay Has enough large and small spaces for air and water Has enough clay to stick together and hold humus Plant roots can easily grow through the spaces 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 SP5 15 Name _____________________________________________ Earth Science Lesson 2 2. Explain how soil is formed. Step 1 Start with a parent material like a fresh lava flow, granite, or limestone Step 2 Physical weathering – this could be done by a glacier, wind, or running water Step 3 Chemical weathering – run water over limestone to dissolve it and make the water acidic. This acid rain can chemically change the rock, Oxidize rock with water Step 4 Add living things like lichens and decomposers to make humus 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 SP6 16 Lesson 3 Lesson Focus Using Earth Science Geosphere Lesson 3: Sandstone Formation Vocabulary igneous rock V.1.M.2 Using Earth Science Knowledge metamorphic rock Explain how rocks are formed Key concepts: Rock cycle processes – melting and cooling (igneous rocks); heat and pressure (metamorphic rocks); cementing and crystallization of sediments (sedimentary rocks); minerals; heat source is interior of Earth. Materials – silt, clay, gravel, sand, rock, lava, magma, remains of living things (bones, shells, plants). Real-world contexts: Physical environments where rocks are being formed; volcanoes; depositional environments such as ocean floor, deltas, beaches, swamps; metamorphic environments deep within the earth’s crust. sedimentary rock V.1.M.3 Using Earth Science Knowledge mechanical weathering Explain how rocks are broken down, how soil is formed and how surface features changes. Key concepts: Chemical and mechanical weathering; erosion by glaciers, water, wind, and down slope movement; decomposition, humus Real-world contexts: Regions in Michigan where erosion by wind, water, or glaciers may have occurred such as river valleys, gullies, shoreline of Great lakes; chemical weathering from acid rain, formation of caves, caverns, sink holes; physical weathering, frost action such as pot holes and crack in sidewalks; plant roots by bacteria, fungi, worms, rodents, other animals. LESSON In this lesson, students have an opportunity to apply the benchmarks from the previous days’ lesson. This question is from the 1996 NAEP Science Assessment for 8th grade. Included are samples of student work. This will give students practice with writing a constructed response item on an assessment and analyzing the characteristics of good and not so good responses. If there was time the previous day, students completed page 7 and this day’s lesson will focus on analyzing the responses from other students and then their own. mineral silt clay lava magma chemical weathering glaciers erosion Materials Student Journal page 7 Paper copies for students or transparency of the scoring rubric on teachers’ page 20 Paper copies and transparencies of anonymous student work from teachers’ pages 21-22. KEY QUESTION What are the characteristics of a good written response? 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 17 PROCEDURE 1. Give students time to complete the question on student page 7 independently. 2. Distribute copies of the scoring rubric or show it to the students on a transparency. Discuss. 3. Show the transparency of Student 1’s response. This is found on the top of teacher page 21. (The water running into the lake makes sandstone). 4. Ask students to use the rubric and score the response. 5. Discuss this student’s work with the class. Find out how many students gave the student’s response a score of 2 points, 1 point, or no points. This can be done by having students raise their hands indicating their choice. Let students share their reasons for choosing that score. 6. Student #1’s response scored zero (0) points. The “water running” does not describe a process from part 1 of the scoring rubric. There is no mention of any of the processes from part 2 of the rubric. 7. Distribute copies of the other responses. Allow students to score the other three papers by themselves. Then have students discuss their scoring results. 8. Discuss these scores with the entire class. The following are the actual scores from NAEP: Student 2 (1 point) Sediment from the mountain is carried down in the stream. The sediment collects here. Reason: This student addresses the transportation of sedimentary material by rivers but does not address the layering, compaction, or hardening of the particles. Student 3 (2 points) Rivers carry dirt and rock material from the mountain to the lake. The material is deposited either under the lake or around the shore. Eventually the material hardens after more and more material is deposited on top of it. Reason: This student shows good understanding of both processes. Student 4 (1 point) Sand from mountain Layers of sand Sandstone formed from pressure Reason: This student addresses the compacting of materials to form sandstone, but does not adequately address the breaking up and transportation of particles by the river. 9. If time, students can score their own paper and revise. They can also exchange papers and score their classmates’ written response. 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 18 Name ___________________________________________ Earth Science Lesson 3 Sandstone Formation The picture below can be used to show how sandstone can form along the edge of a large lake. Draw and write on the picture to show the two main processes of sandstone formation. Source of item: NAEP Science Grade: 8 Block: 2005-8S14 No.: 5 http://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/itmrls/itemdisplay.asp 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 SP7 19 Scoring Rubric for Sandstone Formation Complete (2 points) Student response includes both parts of the sedimentary process. Part 1 should include at least one of the following ideas about the breaking up and transportation of the materials by the river: a. Rivers erode mountain material b. Mountain material is carried by river c. Erosion Part 2 should include one of the following ideas about the layering and compaction of the sediments: a. Hardens b. Solidifies c. Compacts d. Builds up in layers Partial (1 point) Student response includes part 1 or part 2 of the sedimentary process. Unsatisfactory/Incorrect (0 points) Student does not demonstrate an understanding of the sedimentary process. 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 20 Name ___________________________________________ Earth Science Lesson 3 Student 1 Student 2 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox Score ____ Score ____ St. Clair County RESA 2006 21 Name ___________________________________________ Earth Science Lesson 3 Student 3 Score ____ Rivers carry dirt and rock material from the mountain to the lake The material is deposited either under the lake or around the shore. Eventually the material hardens after more and more material is deposited on top of it. Student 4 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox Score ____ St. Clair County RESA 2006 22 Lesson 4 Lesson Focus Using Earth Science Geosphere Lesson 4: Landforms and Topographic Maps Vocabulary plain V.1.M.1 Using Earth Science Knowledge desert Describe and identify surface features using maps. Key concepts: Landforms—plains, deserts, plateaus, basin, Great Lakes, rivers, continental divide, mountains, mountain range, or mountain chain. Tools: Maps—relief, topographic, elevation. Real-world contexts: Maps showing continental and regional surface features, such as Great Lakes or local topography. plateau LESSON In the first part of this lesson, students are given a three dimensional hands-on opportunity to discover what the contour lines of a contour map represent. In the second part, they are given practice interpreting contour lines. elevation A topographic map is a representation of a three-dimensional surface on a flat piece of paper. The distinctive characteristic of a topographic map is that the shape of the Earth's surface is shown by contour lines, sometimes called level lines. Contours are imaginary lines that join points of equal elevation on the surface of the land above or below a reference surface, such as mean sea level. The closer together the contour lines appear on a topographic map, the steeper the slope (assuming constant contour intervals). Contours make it possible to measure the height of mountains, depths of the ocean, and steepness of slopes. Interpreting the colored lines, areas, and other symbols is the first step in using topographic maps. Features are shown as points, lines, or areas, depending on their size and extent. The first features usually noticed on a topographic map are the area features, such as vegetation (green), water (blue), and densely built-up areas (gray or red). Many features are shown by lines that may be straight, curved, solid, dashed, dotted, or in any combination. The colors of the lines usually indicate similar classes of information: topographic contours (brown); lakes, streams, irrigation ditches, and other hydrographic features (blue); land grids and important roads (red); other roads and trails, railroads, boundaries, and other cultural features (black). basin continental divide relief topographic map Materials Student Journal pages 8-13 Color transparencies of Teacher pages 31 and 32 Casserole dish, plastic storage containers such as Gladware, Ziploc, or dish with high sides (about 4-5 inches) that can hold water for each group (one per group) Plastic cups or bowls (one per group) or clay (about 2 sticks per group) Blank transparency for each group to fit over the container Overhead/wet erase pens Centimeter Rulers Colored Pencils Individual houses may be shown as small black squares. For larger buildings, the actual shapes are mapped. In densely built-up areas, most 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 23 individual buildings are omitted and an area tint is shown. On some maps, post offices, churches, city halls, and other landmark buildings are shown within the tinted area. Topographic maps are used for engineering, energy exploration, natural resource conservation, environmental management, public works design, commercial and residential planning, and outdoor activities like hiking, camping, and fishing. KEY QUESTIONS What do contour lines on a topographic map represent? How can topographic maps be used to describe and identify surface features? PROCEDURE PART ONE 1. Arrange students in groups of 3 or 4. 2. Depending on the materials available, students create a model of a mountain with clay or they can use a plastic drink cup or bowl that will fit inside the plastic container or casserole type dish. (Use a little clay to anchor the cup onto the bottom of the container. Two sticks of clay were used for the mountain in the picture. The clay was placed over a 3 oz plastic cup so less clay would be needed.) 3. Put one centimeter of water in the bottom of the container. 4. Students place the overhead transparency over the container and trace the outline of where the water meets the mountain. This represents where the mountain is one cm tall. Also, have them trace the outline of where the transparency meets the container. That way, they will be able to line up the transparency later in the exact same place. 5. Students then remove the transparency and add exactly one more cm of water to the container. 6. Replace the transparency in the same spot and trace where the water meets the mountain. The person drawing the contour line should stand and look at the drawing from the same height for each time the contour lines are drawn. This line represents where the mountain is two cm tall. 7. Continue this process several times until a topographic map has been created for the mountain model. Explain that each line represents one cm of height on the clay mountain. This is the similar to real topographic maps. Each line represents a change in height/elevation from the last line. 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 24 PROCEDURE PART TWO Students complete pages 8-13 in their student journals. Page 9: Students make a profile of the hill similar to the example on page 8. Page 10: Be sure students go back to the graphic on the bottom of page 9 to answer questions 5-7. Page 11: Students use topographic map of Salt Lake City on page 12 to answer question nine. Display the color transparency of the Continental Divide or show the page on the computer monitor so you can see the blue contour lines that indicate the glaciers. If you have access to the Internet, go to http://www.topozone.com/map.asp?z=12&n=4513329&e=424430&size=l&datum =nad83 to display the interactive map online. Or go to topozone.com http://www.topozone.com/ ; view maps, Utah, Salt Lake County, scroll down to State Capitol RESOURCES Online digital topography maps; browse by Michigan counties at this web site: http://www.topozone.com/states/Michigan.asp Resources for teaching about Topographic Maps from USGS: http://education.usgs.gov/common/secondary.htm#topographic What do maps show? http://interactive2.usgs.gov/learningweb/teachers/mapsshow_download.htm Credit: U.S. Geological Survey Department of the Interior/USGS 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 25 Name _____________________________________________ Earth Science Lesson 4 What Do Topographic Maps Show? One special kind of map is called a topographic map. A topographic map is a representation of a three-dimensional surface on a flat piece of paper. The shape of the Earth's surface is shown by contour lines, sometimes called level lines. These are imaginary lines that join points of equal elevation on the surface of the land. The closer together the contour lines appear on a topographic map, the steeper the slope. The top of this drawing has contour lines showing the hills that are illustrated at the bottom. On this map, the vertical distance between each contour line is 10 feet. Hill A Hill B 1. Which is higher, Hill A or Hill B? How do you know? Hill B is higher. The map shows that Hill A is 40 ft and Hill B is 50 feet. 2. Which is steeper, Hill A or Hill B? How do you know? Hill B is steeper. The contour lines are closer for Hill B. 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 SP8 26 3. Draw lines from where the horizontal line intersects the contour lines in the map to the appropriate lines below them. The first one is done for you. Connect the end points of your lines to show the profile of this hill. N N W W E E S S 4. Which side of the hill is the steepest? How do you know? The eastern slope is the steepest. The contour lines are close together Use the picture below to answer questions 5-7 on the next page. 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 SP 9 27 The topographic map at the bottom of page 9 shows Willow Hill (elevation 312 feet) and Hobbes Creek. On the map, each contour line represents 20 feet of elevation. 5. What is the elevation at point X? A) 240 feet B) 250 feet Correct Answer C C) 280 feet D) 300 feet 6. In which general direction does Hobbes Creek flow? A) To the north B) To the east Correct Answer A C) To the south D) To the west 7. Which side of Willow Hill has the most gradual slope? A) B) C) D) North side East side South side West side Correct Answer B 8. How might a topographic map help if you were selecting: a) A route for a hike Choose a route that is not too steep. When planning a long hike, you may want to see if water is available or whether it should be carried in. Forested or wooded areas would mean that there is shade. b) The best location for an airport Make sure airplanes have plenty of room to take off and land before the ground rises. The airport should not be built in a swamp, in the woods, or in a built up area. c) A route for a new road Find a shallow grade rather than a steep one. Do not cross too many rivers because you would need to build a bridge and bridges are expensive. 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 SP 10 28 9. Use the topographic map of Salt Lake City on page 12 to answer the following questions: a) What is the approximate elevation of the State capitol? 4,500 feet (accept answers between 4300 and 4600) b) What is the approximate elevation of Jackson School? Between 4,220 and 4,225 c) Would you be walking uphill or downhill to go from the State capitol to Jackson School? Explain. Downhill, from 4,500 ft elevation to almost 4,220. d) List things you would see along the way from the State capitol to Jackson School. A museum, West High School, a fire station, and two churches 10. The continental divide runs along the crest of the Rockies, from British Columbia, through the United States, and continues southward into Mexico and Central America. It divides the continent's principal drainage into that flowing eastward to the Hudson Bay in Canada or to the Mississippi River and that flowing westward to the Pacific Ocean. The topographic map of the continental divide on page 13 shows the continental divide as it runs through mountain ranges in Wyoming. a) Use a colored pencil to trace the continental divide on the topographical map. b) Find Lizard Head Peak. Circle it in red. c) Find Pingora Peak. Circle it in green. d) Use the color copy of the map from your teacher’s overhead transparency or computer monitor. Outline the glaciers by Camels Hump, Pingora Peak and Wolfs Head in blue. e) Use a blue pencil to trace the path of the stream that flows from the glacier on the north side of Pingora Peak into Lonesome Lake. Into which body of water will some of that water finally flow? Some water will eventually flow east into the Mississippi River f) Trace the path of the stream that flows from the glacier west of the continental divide into Texas Lake. Into which body of water will some of that water finally flow? Water will eventually flow into the Pacific Ocean 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 SP 11 29 Topographic Map of Salt Lake City 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 30 SP 12 The Continental Divide Scale 1:50,000 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 31 SP 13 Lizard Head Peak, Wyoming San Juan Mountains Koren Nydick July, 2005 http://www.piquaclimber.com/past/lizardhead/lizardhead.htm Pingora Peak, Wyoming Wind River Range, Shoshone National Forest, Jim Peaco, 1998 http://www.nps.gov/yell/slidefile/scenics/outsideynp/Page-3.htm 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 32 Lesson 5 Lesson Focus Using Earth Science Hydrosphere Lesson 5: Water Movement and Groundwater Vocabulary V.2.M.2 Using Earth Science Knowledge runoff Describe how water in Michigan reaches the ocean and returns. Key concepts: Water path—runoff, creeks, streams, wetlands, rivers, Great Lakes, Sources—snowmelt, rainfall, gravity. Real-world contexts: Maps showing streams, lakes, rivers, oceans; examples of motions of rivers and lakes; investigations of rivers and lake temperatures; saltiness of ocean. creek V.2.M.3 Using Earth Science Knowledge gravity Explain how water exists below the earth’s surface and how it is replenished. Key concepts: Ground water—water table, spring, porous, saturate, filtration. Sources—snow melt, rain fall. Real world contexts: Examples of groundwater, including springs, wells, water soaking into the ground. water table LESSON This lesson is a review of the benchmarks for the hydrosphere. Follow the reciprocal teaching strategies described below as the students read the information. Naïve Conceptions Some students believe: groundwater exists in the form of underground streams or rivers. most of earth’s fresh water is found in the form of rivers, lakes, and streams rather than in the form of groundwater. stream wetland river snowmelt spring porous saturate filtration Materials Student Journal pages 14 -18 Colored Pencils Transparency of Student Page 18 RECIPROCAL TEACHING 1 Palincsar (1986) describes the concept of reciprocal teaching: "Definition: Reciprocal teaching refers to an instructional activity that takes place in the form of a dialogue between teachers and students regarding segments of text. The dialogue is structured by the use of four 1 Retrieved from the NCREL website at http://www.ncrel.org/sdrs/areas/issues/students/atrisk/at6lk38.htm 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 33 strategies: summarizing, question generating, clarifying, and predicting. The teacher and students take turns assuming the role of teacher in leading this dialogue. Purpose: The purpose of reciprocal teaching is to facilitate a group effort between teacher and students as well as among students in the task of bringing meaning to the text. Each strategy was selected for the following purpose: Summarizing provides the opportunity to identify and integrate the most important information in the text. Text can be summarized across sentences, across paragraphs, and across the passage as a whole. When the students first begin the reciprocal teaching procedure, their efforts are generally focused at the sentence and paragraph levels. As they become more proficient, they are able to integrate at the paragraph and passage levels. Question generating reinforces the summarizing strategy and carries the learner one more step along in the comprehension activity. When students generate questions, they first identify the kind of information that is significant enough to provide the substance for a question. They then pose this information in question form and self-test to ascertain that they can indeed answer their own question. Question generating is a flexible strategy to the extent that students can be taught and encouraged to generate questions at many levels. For example, some school situations require that students master supporting detail information; others require that the students be able to infer or apply new information from text. Clarifying is an activity that is particularly important when working with students who have a history of comprehension difficulty. These students may believe that the purpose of reading is saying the words correctly; they may not be particularly uncomfortable that the words, and in fact the passage, are not making sense. When the students are asked to clarify, their attention is called to the fact that there may be many reasons why text is difficult to understand (e.g., new vocabulary, unclear reference words, and unfamiliar and perhaps difficult concepts). They are taught to be alert to the effects of such impediments to comprehension and to take the necessary measures to restore meaning (e.g., reread, ask for help). Predicting occurs when students hypothesize what the author will discuss next in the text. In order to do this successfully, students must activate the relevant background knowledge that they already possess regarding the topic. The students have a purpose for reading: to confirm or disprove their hypotheses. Furthermore, the opportunity has been created for the students to link the new knowledge they will encounter in the text with the knowledge they already possess. The predicting strategy also facilitates use of text structure as students learn that headings, subheadings, and questions imbedded in the text are useful means of anticipating what might occur next. In summary, each of these strategies was selected as a means of aiding students to construct meaning from text as well as a means of monitoring their reading to ensure that they, in fact, understand what they read. KEY QUESTIONS Where can water be found on Earth? What processes move water through the water cycle? 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 34 PROCEDURE 1. Students read Water Movement and Groundwater on pages 14-15. Follow the reciprocal teaching strategies. 2. Students complete the two-column notes organizer to organize the concepts about light presented in the reading. They can use the suggested outline headings, or use their own loose-leaf paper and create their own outline. 3. To assess student understanding of watersheds, use the Great Lakes Watersheds map that follows the lesson. Have students approximate the boundaries of each watershed and then trace each boundary. Then they can color each watershed area a different color. If you feel it necessary, you may want to create an overhead of the map and model for the students how to approximate where the boundary of one watershed would be. A teacher guide has been provided to show the different boundaries between the watersheds. 4. An animated review of how the Great Lakes were formed is at this web site: http://www.on.ec.gc.ca/greatlakeskids/GreatLakesMovie5.html RESOURCES U.S. Environmental Protection Agency – Resources for Teachers 4-8 http://www.epa.gov/safewater/kids/teachers_4-8.html Drinking Water and Ground Water Kids’ Stuff Resources for Kids and Teachers http://www.epa.gov/safewater/kids/index.html The Water Source Book The Water Sourcebooks contain 324 activities for grades K-12 divided into four sections: K-2, 3-5, 5-8, and 9-12. Each section is divided into five chapters: Introduction to Water, Drinking Water and Wastewater Treatment, Surface Water Resources, Ground Water Resources, and Wetlands and Coastal Waters. This environmental education program explains the water management cycle using a balanced approach showing how it affects all aspects of the environment. All activities contain hands-on investigations, fact sheets, reference materials, and a glossary of terms. Activities are organized by objectives, materials needed, background information, advance preparation, procedures, and resources. All parts of the program may be printed and copied. For more information, see the links below under "About Water Sourcebooks". http://www.epa.gov/safewater/kids/wsb/index.html 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 35 Name ___________________________________________ Earth Science Lesson 5 Water Movement and Groundwater Earth is a water planet. Over 70% of the Earth’s surface is covered with it, but almost all of that (97%) is salt water found in oceans and salt lakes. Of the remaining 3% fresh water, 68.7% is locked up in glaciers and icecaps, about 30% is groundwater, and the rest is found in the freshwater lakes (0.26%), rivers (0.006%), and the atmosphere (0.04%). Water is also present in plants, animals, and soil. Freshwater on Earth Groundwater Lakes Rivers Other Atmosphere Icecaps & Glaciers Groundwater Lakes Atmosphere Rivers Icecaps & Glaciers Water on the Earth is continually moving above, below, and on the surface of the Earth. Along the way it may change state from liquid to a gas or solid. For example, in Michigan, water may evaporate from the lakes, rivers, streams, or ponds but it may also get into the atmosphere from animals and plants. Once the water vapor is in the air, it may cool and condense, forming clouds, which may be blown to another place. Eventually the water will fall as some form of precipitation. The rain and melted snow runs off into wetlands or inland lakes, which empty into rivers that flow into one of the Great Lakes. The ground will absorb some and some water infiltrates through the soil into the groundwater. Some water will move through the Great Lakes, into the St. Lawrence Seaway, and into the Atlantic Ocean. There are many paths that water can take as it moves around the planet. This continuous movement of water is called the water cycle. Groundwater Groundwater is water that exists beneath the soil surface. When it rains or snow melts, water soaks into the ground and seeps through the soil until it reaches a depth where all of the pore spaces are filled with water, very much like water filling the empty spaces within a sponge. Water in this saturated zone is called groundwater, and it can flow vertically and horizontally at a rate influenced by the shape of the land and type of material it is moving through. Groundwater is found in aquifers, formations where 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 36 significant amounts of water can be stored, moved or supplied to a well or spring. Eventually, some groundwater flows to the surface to feed into lakes and streams. In Michigan, groundwater typically leaves the ground to replenish rivers, lakes, or wetlands. Conversely, surface waters recharge groundwater sources by soaking into the ground as described above. Surface Water and Watersheds-How Everything Is Connected Surface water can exist in many forms, including rivers, streams and lakes. These can be part of what is called a watershed. We all live in a watershed. A watershed is an area of land from which all the water drains (runs downhill) to a particular body of water such as a stream, pond, lake or river. A ridge or other area of elevated land, called a divide, separates one watershed from another. Streams on one side flow in a different direction than streams on the other side. SP 14 A watershed can be large, such as the Lake Huron Watershed or quite small, such as a couple of acres that drain into a pond. Larger watersheds are often called basins and usually contain many smaller watersheds. The Lake Huron Watershed would include all of the surface water that drains into Lake Huron. The Great Lakes Basin would include all of the surface water that drains into the Great Lakes. The Great Lakes are, in turn, part of the St. Lawrence Seaway System. Water from the Great Lakes flows into the Atlantic Ocean 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 37 Cornell Two-Column Notes Use the reading to help you outline the big ideas about groundwater. Keywords: Water Cycle Notes: I. Water goes through the water cycle. A. Evaporation 1. Evaporates from lakes, rivers, streams, ponds 2. Evaporates from animals and plant B. Condensation 1. Water vapor cools 2. Changes back to water as clouds C. Precipitation 1. Water in clouds is too heavy 2. Falls to earth D. After precipitation 1. Evaporate 2. Flow as runoff to a stream 3. Soak into ground and be used by plants 4. Become groundwater Groundwater II. Groundwater A. Comes from 2 places 1. Rain 2. Snow melting B. How does water become groundwater? 1. Soaks into ground Saturation 2. Fills in all the pores like filling a sponge--Saturation SP 16 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 38 C. What influences the water’s movement? 1. Shape of land 2. Material water is moving through D. Where does it go in Michigan? 1. Rivers 2. Lakes 3. Wetlands Watershed III. Watersheds A. What are they and how are they divided? 1. Area where all surface water drains to same body of water 2. Divided by ridges B. Examples of large and small watersheds 1. Lake Huron--large 2. Pond--small C. What a basin is and one example 1. Large watershed 2. Great Lakes D. Great Lakes to the Atlantic Ocean-How? 1. Flows through St. Lawrence Seaway System 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 SP 17 39 Name ___________________________________________ Earth Science Lesson 5 Find the boundaries for these watersheds in the Great Lakes Basin. Hint: Find the divides by tracing the flow of the rivers into each of the Great Lakes. 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 SP 18 40 Lesson 6 Lesson Focus Using Earth Science Atmosphere and Weather Lesson 6: Weather Vocabulary V. 3.M.1 Using Earth Science Knowledge cold front Explain patterns of changing weather and how they are measured. Key concepts: Weather patterns—cold front, warm front, stationary front, air mass, humidity. Tools: Thermometer, rain gauge, wind direction indicator, anemometer, weather maps, satellite weather images. Real-world contexts: Sudden temperature and cloud formation changes; records, charts, and graphs of weather changes over periods of days; lake effect snow. warm front stationary front air mass humidity anemometer molecule water vapor V. 3.M.2 Using Earth Science Knowledge Describe the composition and characteristics of the atmosphere. Key concepts: Composition—air, molecules, gas, water vapor, dust particles, ozone. Characteristics— air pressure and temperature changes with altitude, humidity Real-world contexts: Examples of characteristics of the atmosphere, including pressurized cabins in airplanes, demonstrations of air pressure; examples of air-borne particulates, such as smoke, dust, pollen, bacteria; effects of humidity, such as condensation, dew on surfaces, comfort level of humans. ozone evaporation condensation precipitation relative humidity dew point fog V. 3.M.3 Using Earth Science Knowledge Explain the behavior of water in the atmosphere. Key concepts: Water cycle—evaporation, water vapor, warm air rises, cooling, condensation, clouds; Precipitation—rain, snow, hail, sleet, freezing rain; Relative humidity, dew point, fog Real-world contexts: Aspects of the water cycle in weather, including clouds, fog, precipitation, evaporating puddles, flooding, droughts Materials Student Journal pages 19-25 Colored Pencils LESSON Students will have an opportunity to read, construct and interpret weather charts and graphs. They will also draw a picture and explain the water cycle. Information that students are not expected to master, but are important for interpreting the graphs, is included in the scenario of some of the problems. Students should learn to read all the text as a test taking strategy. There may be information in the text that could help them answer some questions. 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 41 KEY QUESTIONS How can charts and graphs help interpret weather data and show relationships? What is the water cycle? PROCEDURE: 1. Students work on the first two questions about dew point and temperature. Information needed to answer these questions is contained in the text before the question. Discuss answers and strategies for finding the answers. 2. For question 3, students draw a picture that will represent the water cycle. Students should continue answering questions four through nine on their own to give others time to draw and explain. Take time for students to share their drawings of the water cycle. Some students think that water disappears when it evaporates. Listen during their explanations to be sure they understand the science. Students’ responses should include the motion of molecules as reviewed in earlier lessons. 3. In the next set of questions, students construct graphs of the data and describe an interesting pattern from the data of wind speed and air pressure. If there is not enough time during class to do the graphs, students can do these as a homework assignment and they can be discussed the next day. RESOURCES http://www.epa.gov/safewater/kids/wsb/index.html The Water Sourcebooks contain 324 activities for grades K-12 divided into four sections: K-2, 35, 5-8, and 9-12. Each section is divided into five chapters: Introduction to Water, Drinking Water and Wastewater Treatment, Surface Water Resources, Ground Water Resources, and Wetlands and Coastal Waters. Weather Underground: http://www.wunderground.com/ Intellicast.com: http://www.intellicast.com/ University of Illinois Online Weather Guide: http://ww2010.atmos.uiuc.edu/(Gh)/guides/mtr/home.rxml The Weather Channel: http://www.weather.com/maps/ USA Today Weather Maps: http://www.usatoday.com/weather/fronts/latest-fronts-systems.htm 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 42 Name _____________________________________________ Earth Science Lesson 6 Weather The graph below shows the temperature and dew point for Detroit on July 16, 2005. Use it to answer questions 1 and 2. Detroit, Michigan July 16, 2005 Temperature Dew Point 90 80 Temperature (°F) 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 5:00 AM 6:00 AM 7:00 AM 8:00 AM 9:00 10:00 11:00 12:00 1:00 AM AM AM PM PM 2:00 PM 3:00 PM 4:00 PM 5:00 PM 6:00 PM 7:00 PM 8:00 PM 9:00 10:00 PM PM Time of Day The temperature at which water vapor condenses into liquid is called the dew point temperature. If the air temperature and the dew point temperature are close to each other, dew can form or the weather can be misty, foggy or rainy. Temperatures at or below freezing may cause water vapor to condense as frost instead of dew. 1. Using information from the graph, at what time might there have been dew on the grass or fog in the area? Explain. There may have been dew or fog between 5:00 and 7:00 in the morning. The temperature and the dew point temperature were close. 2. It rained in Detroit on July 16 in the afternoon. According to the graph, at what time did it most likely rain? It rained between 3:00 pm and 6:00 pm because the temperature and the dew point were close. 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 SP 19 43 3. Draw a diagram to show how the water that falls as rain in one place may come from another place that is far away. Explain your drawing. A correct response includes three steps: 1. Evaporation of water from a source 2. Transportation of water as vapor/clouds to another place 3. Precipitation in another place An explanation would refer to the water cycle in which water evaporates into the air. This happens when the molecules are heated, usually from the sun, and move rapidly, breaking the molecular attraction that holds them together. When they escape, they become gas. Eventually, the molecules cool, losing energy, and forming liquid water again. These small drops of water condense on salt or dust particles in the air, forming clouds and are carried away in currents of air to another place. The molecules of water fall from the clouds as precipitation in the form of rain, sleet, or snow. 4. The diagram below shows a map of the world with the lines of latitude marked. Which of the following places marked on the map is most likely to have an average yearly temperature similar to location X. A. B. C. D. Location A Location B Location C Location D 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox Answer: A St. Clair County RESA 2006 SP 20 44 The following weather maps from http://www.intellicast.com/ show the weather conditions in the United States at 6:00 pm Eastern Daylight Time on July 18 and July 19, 2005. Use the maps to answer questions 5 – 7. 1 Date: July 18, 2005 Time: 2100UTC 2 Date: July 19, 2005 Time: 2100 UTC 5. What statement best describes the weather in Michigan’s Lower Peninsula on July 18? A. B. C. D. 1 2 High pressure with clouds and rain High pressure with high temperatures and rain Stormy as a cold front passes through the state Stormy as a warm front passes through the state Answer: C Surface Analysis retrieved from http://www.intellicast.com/ July 18, 2005 Surface Analysis retrieved from http://www.intellicast.com/ July 19, 2005 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 SP 21 45 6. What statement best describes the weather across most of Michigan on July 19 compared to the day before? A. B. C. D. Higher temperatures with high air pressure High pressure with sunny skies and cooler temperatures Low pressure with sunny skies and higher temperatures Higher winds and cooler temperatures Answer: B 7. In which direction did Hurricane Emily move? A. B. C. D. North Northwest Southwest South Answer: B 8. A storm is classified as a Tropical Depression if the maximum sustained wind speeds are 38 mph or less. It becomes a Tropical Storm if the maximum sustained wind speeds are 39 mph to 73 mph. When the wind speeds reach 74 mph, it is classified as a Hurricane. The chart below lists the hurricane categories according to the Saffir-Simpson Scale. Saffir-Simpson Chart Hurricane Category Lowest Air Pressure (Millibars) Wind Speed (miles per hour) Damage 1 980+ 74-95 Minimal 2 965-979 96-110 Moderate 3 945-964 111-130 Extensive 4 920-944 131-155 Extreme 5 Below 920 159+ Catastrophic 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 SP 22 46 Name ____________________________________________ Earth Science Lesson 6 The tracking chart below shows Ivan’s wind speed and air pressure. Hurricane Ivan Tracking Chart Date 9/2 9/3 9/4 9/5 9/6 9/7 9/8 9/9 9/10 9/11 9/12 9/13 9/14 9/15 9/16 9/17 Wind (mph) 30 50 50 125 105 120 140 150 140 165 150 160 140 135 60 20 Air Pressure (mb) 1009 1000 994 950 958 956 947 921 937 914 916 912 929 939 980 999 9. On which date did Tropical Storm Ivan become Hurricane Ivan? A. B. C. D. September 3 September 4 September 5 September 6 Answer: C 10. According to the chart, on what date did Ivan first become a Category 5 Hurricane? A. B. C. D. September 9 September 11 September 12 September 13 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox Answer: B St. Clair County RESA 2006 SP 23 47 S P 11. Use the data from the Hurricane Ivan Tracking Chart to plot the air pressure at the 4 point. Use a different color pencil for each center of the storm. Connect each 3 stage of Ivan from Tropical Depression to Category 5 Hurricane. Use the information in the Saffir-Simpson chart to determine the Hurricane category. Air Pressure at the Center of Hurricane Ivan From September 2 – September 17 9/2 9/3 9/4 9/5 9/6 9/7 9/8 9/9 9/10 9/11 9/12 9/13 9/14 9/15 9/16 9/17 12. What relationship is there between the hurricane categories and air pressure? As the hurricane became stronger, the air pressure decreased. 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 SP 24 48 13. Use the data from the Hurricane Ivan Tracking Chart to plot his wind speeds. Connect each point. Use a different color pencil for each stage of a hurricane from Tropical Depression to Category 5. Maximum Sustained Wind Speeds for Hurricane Ivan From September 2 – September 17 9/2 9/3 9/4 9/5 9/6 9/7 9/8 9/9 9/10 9/11 9/12 9/13 9/14 9/15 9/16 9/17 14. What relationship is there between the categories of the hurricane and wind speed? As the hurricane became stronger, the wind speed increased. 15. Looking at the graphs of air pressure and wind speed, what relationship is there between the air pressure and the wind speed? As the air pressure decreases, the wind speed increases. 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 SP 25 49 Maximum Sustained Wind Speed Hurricane Ivan 2004 180 160 140 mph 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 9/2 9/3 9/4 9/5 9/6 9/7 9/8 9/9 9/10 9/11 9/12 9/13 9/14 9/15 9/16 9/17 Date Air Pressure at the Center of Hurricane Ivan 2004 1020 1000 980 mb 960 940 920 900 880 860 9/2 9/3 9/4 9/5 9/6 9/7 9/8 9/9 9/10 9/11 9/12 9/13 9/14 9/15 9/16 9/17 Date 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 SP 26 50 Lesson 7 Lesson Focus Using Earth Science Solar System, Galaxy and Universe Lesson 7: Phases of the Moon and Eclipses Vocabulary V.4.M.2 Using Earth Science Knowledge Describe, compare, and explain the motions of solar system objects. Key concepts: Orbit, rotation (spin), axis, gravity, planets, moons, comets, asteroids, seasons. Tilt of the earth on its axis, direct/indirect rays. Real-world contexts: Observations of comet motion over days and weeks, length of day and year on planets, changes in length of daylight and height of sun in sky; changes in daily temperature patterns; summer and winter solstices, spring and fall equinoxes. orbit rotation axis gravity planets moon comet V.4.M.3 Using Earth Science Knowledge Describe and explain common observations of the night skies. Key concepts: Perceived and actual movement of the moon and planets across the sky, moon phases, eclipses, stars and constellations, planets, Milky Way, comets, comet tails, meteors; Sun is light source for all solar system objects (except meteors; friction with atmosphere), emitted light, reflected light Real-world contexts: Outdoor observation of the skies, using telescopes and binoculars when available, as well as “naked-eye” viewing; viewing with robotic telescopes via the World Wide Web; telescopic and spacecraft-based photos of planets, moons, and comets; news reports of planetary and lunar exploration LESSON This is a review lesson of phases of the moon and lunar and solar eclipses. To make these abstract concepts easier to visualize, models will be used. Students will then be given an opportunity to explain their ideas in writing. For these investigations, the room should be as dark as possible. Even a small amount of light from a source other than the lamp will shine on the Styrofoam bulbs and affect the results. KEY QUESTIONS How can I model and explain the phases of the moon? How can I model and explain solar and lunar eclipses? 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 meteor asteroid season moon phase eclipse constellation Materials Student Journal pages 26-27 Small Styrofoam balls (about 2 inch); one for each student Barbecue skewers or pencils Lamp without a shade Extension cord for lamp to reach center of the room 51 PROCEDURE: PHASES OF THE MOON 1. Darken the room as much as possible. Put a lamp in the center of the room. Position the lamp so the bulb is eye level for the students. 2. Give each student a Styrofoam ball and a skewer or pencil. (The pencil makes a larger hole, so a skewer is preferred.) Stick the skewer into the ball. 3. Students stand in a circle facing the lamp. Their heads will represent the Earth. The ball represents the moon. The lamp represents the Sun. 4. With all lights out except for the lamp, students hold their ball out in front of them. Since the moon orbits the Earth, the students will move the ball in a circle around their head. The motion needs to be counterclockwise. This models the orbit of the moon. Make sure students understand the moon’s orbital path. Many students believe that the moon stays in one place in relation to the Earth, just like the Sun. They think that when the Earth turns and faces the sun, it is day. When the Earth faces the moon it is night. Because the Earth is spinning on its axis, the moon appears to travel across the sky. 5. The moon rotates in the same amount of time that it takes to revolve around the Earth— 27 days, 7 hours, 43 minutes and 11.47 seconds! We always see the same side of the Moon facing us. To better see the phases of the moon in our model, the students will have to turn with the moon’s orbit. The time between two consecutive full moons is 29.5 days. This longer period of time is due to the fact that the Earth is also moving along its orbit as it revolves around the Sun. In reality, Earth would have made about 29 turns during the time it takes the moon to complete one orbit.1 6. Students hold the ball in front of them. The people living on the dark side of the Earth (the students’ backside) cannot see the moon because the moon faces the side of Earth that is having day. When the moon is in this position, it is the new moon. The dark side of the moon is facing the daytime side of the Earth. 7. Take a few steps counterclockwise, while continuing to hold the ball straight out in front of you. The right side of the Styrofoam ball will sparkle a bit as it reflects the light from the lamp. This models the crescent moon. 8. Continue to take a few more steps counterclockwise. When you have made a quarter of a turn from the starting position, you will see a representation of the first quarter moon. The right side of the ball will sparkle as it reflects the light from the lamp. 9. Continue to take steps in the counterclockwise motion and watch an increasing amount of the ball become illuminated. This represents the waxing gibbous moon. 10. When you have made a half turn from the original position, your back will be facing the lamp. The entire side of the ball facing you will be reflecting the light from the lamp. This is a full moon. Since you cannot see the lamp, you are on the nighttime side of the Earth facing the full moon. 11. Continue to move counterclockwise as you continue to hold the ball in front of you. The amount of light reflected off the ball will begin to decrease. You will see the waning gibbous and the last quarter of the moon, the waning crescent, and finally back to the new moon. 12. Be sure to remind students that the Earth and the moon do not complete this path simultaneously. 1 See Teacher Background Information at this web site: http://www.eyeonthesky.org/lessonplans/08sun_moonplayground.html 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 52 PROCEDURE: SOLAR ECLIPSE 1. The solar eclipse occurs when the moon is positioned between the sun and the Earth in such a way that the moon blocks the sun and creates a shadow on part of the Earth. The solar eclipse can only occur when there is a new moon. 2. To model the solar eclipse, stand facing the lamp and hold the ball so it covers the light bulb. Look at the faces of the students across from you to see the shadow of the ball on them. If their heads were the Earth, the people living in that shadow would experience the solar eclipse. PROCEDURE: LUNAR ECLIPSE 1. The lunar eclipse occurs when the Earth is positioned between the sun and the moon so that the Earth blocks the light from the sun and makes a shadow on the moon. 2. To model the lunar eclipse, stand with your back to the lamp. The ball is held straight out in front of you, but you will need to position it so that your head, which represents the Earth, blocks the light from the lamp and makes a shadow on the Styrofoam ball. RESOURCES Demonstration of the phases of the moon and the moon’s orbit around the Earth http://pmo-sun.uoregon.edu/images/lunarphases.mpg The current moon phase http://kids.msfc.nasa.gov/Earth/Moon/Moon.asp U.S. Naval Observatory: Phases of the Moon If you continue to scroll down this page, there is a movie that shows the phases of the moon. http://aa.usno.navy.mil/faq/docs/moon_phases.html Resource for software that helps students understand moon phases, seasons, and weather concepts through interactive visualizations. A 30-day free trial is available. http://www.riversci.com/ Sneider, C. I. (1986). Earth, Moon, and Stars. Berkeley: Lawrence Hall of Science. A GEMS unit for grades 5-8 that teaches the concepts of a spherical Earth, Moon Phases, and Eclipses 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 53 Name _________________________________________ Earth Science Lesson 7 The Moon and Its Phases 1. Explain how we can see the moon. The moon does not make its own light. The sun shines on the moon and that light is reflected toward the Earth. 2. Describe how the moon appears to change its shape. Use may use pictures to explain. The part of the moon that is illuminated by the Sun changes as the moon orbits the Earth. After the new moon, you see a small crescent shape. The lit part gradually increases until the moon appears full. Then the lit part of the moon gradually decreases until it is a new moon again. This takes about 29 days because it takes the moon about 29 days to complete its orbit around the Earth SP 26 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 54 Name _________________________________________ Earth Science Lesson 7 Eclipses Draw the position of the Moon on the diagram below to show what is meant by an eclipse of the Sun, a solar eclipse. Explain your drawing. Earth Moon Sun When the moon comes between the Sun and the Earth and it casts a shadow on the Earth, there is a solar eclipse. Draw the position of the Moon on the diagram below to show what is meant by an eclipse of the Moon, a lunar eclipse. Explain your drawing. Earth Moon Sun When the Earth comes between the Sun and the Moon, and the Earth’s shadow falls on the moon, there is a lunar eclipse. Note: This diagram is not drawn to scale SP 27 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 55 Lesson 8 Lesson Focus Using Earth Science Solar System, Galaxy and Universe Lesson 8: Seasons Vocabulary V. 4.M.2 Using Earth Science Knowledge Describe, compare, and explain the motions of solar system objects. Key concepts: Orbit, rotation (spin), axis, gravity, planets, moons, comets, asteroids, seasons; tilt of the earth on its axis, direct/indirect rays. Real-world contexts: Observations of comet motion over days and weeks, length of day and year on planets, changes in length of daylight and height of sun in sky; changes in daily temperature patterns; summer and winter solstices, spring and fall equinoxes LESSON Students will start this lesson by thinking about why there are seasons on Earth. A common misconception is that distance to the Sun is the reason for the seasons. Textbooks exaggerate the elliptical orbit of the Earth around the Sun. Our orbit around the Sun is nearly circular. The Earth-Sun distance varies only by 1.5% and this distance is not significant to be the reason for seasons. Students may believe that we are closer to the Sun in the summer, but the Earth is actually closest to the Sun on January 2 and farthest on July 4. A more subtle misconception students have is that when the Northern hemisphere is tilted toward the sun, the Northern Hemisphere is closer to the sun. Given the diameter of the Earth is 12,000 kilometers or about 7,900 miles, that difference is even more insignificant. orbit rotation axis planet moon comet asteroid Materials Student pages 29 Data projector, monitor, or computers to show web site visualization models There are two main factors responsible for seasons on Earth. First, there are more daylight hours where the parts of the Earth are tilted toward the sun. Second, during the summer, the sun’s position is higher in the sky. This increases the angle of incidence of sunlight and the concentration of light on the ground, so the ground gets warmer. These are complex ideas and it takes time for students to develop this scientific understanding. An excellent resource for a unit that helps students develop these concepts is the GEMS book listed in the Resource section. KEY QUESTIONS What causes the seasons? 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 56 PROCEDURE 1. Students write a response to the first question on their Journal page. 2. Have students share their ideas. List them on the board, but do not judge them at this time. However, allow students to agree or disagree with each other. If students disagree with another student’s statement, they should state the evidence they have to support their claim. 3. Show the NASA online video from http://kids.msfc.nasa.gov/Earth/Seasons/Seasons.htm. It is a short video. Show it in its entirety the first time. Repeat it and use the controls at the top of the screen to stop the video for discussion. Discuss any of the ideas listed on the board and compare them to the ideas presented in the video. 4. Students compare their own responses and improve or revise them. RESOURCES Gould, A., Willard, C., & Pompea, S. (2000). The Real Reasons for Seasons: Sun-Earth Connection. Berkeley, CA: Lawrence Hall of Science. Online Video Clip: What Causes the Seasons? http://kids.msfc.nasa.gov/Earth/Seasons/Seasons.htm Resource for software that helps students understand moon phases, seasons, and weather concepts through visualizations http://www.riversci.com/ 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 57 Name _________________________________________ Earth Science Lesson 8 Seasons 1. Why do you think it is hotter in the United States in June than in December? Because the Earth is tilted on its axis, the United States receives more hours of sunlight in June. The Sun is positioned higher in the sky, so the rays of light are more direct. Watch the NASA online video about the seasons at: http://kids.msfc.nasa.gov/Earth/Seasons/Seasons.htm 2. Compare your ideas to those presented in the video. Discuss them in your class. What ideas are the same as yours? What ideas are different? Revise or improve your response to the first question. 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 SP 28 58 Lesson 9 Lesson Focus Using Earth Science Solar System, Galaxy and Universe Lesson 9: Comparing Earth to Other Planets Vocabulary V. 4.M.1 Using Earth Science Knowledge Compare the earth to other planets and moons in terms of supporting life. Key concepts: Surface conditions—gravity, atmospheres, temperature; relative distances, relative sizes. Sun produces the light and heat for each planet. Molecules necessary to support life—water, oxygen, nitrogen, carbon Real-world contexts: Examples of local and extreme conditions on earth vs. conditions on other planets; exploration of planets and their satellites V. 4.M.2 Using Earth Science Knowledge Describe, compare, and explain the motions of solar system objects. Key concepts: Orbit, rotation (spin), axis, gravity, planets, moons, comets, asteroids, seasons; tilt of the earth on its axis, direct/indirect rays. Real-world contexts: Observations of comet motion over days and weeks, length of day and year on planets, changes in length of daylight and height of sun in sky; changes in daily temperature patterns; summer and winter solstices, spring and fall equinoxes gravity atmosphere orbit rotation axis planet moon comet asteroid Materials LESSON This lesson gives students an opportunity to use what they know to interpret the characteristics of other planets given in a chart. Student page 29 KEY QUESTIONS How does the Earth compare to other planets? PROCEDURE Allow students to work in pairs. They will answer the questions using information from the chart. Discuss as a whole group after students are finished. 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 59 Name ____________________________________________ Earth Science Lesson 9 Comparing Earth to the Other Inner Planets Mean Distance from the Sun Time to Move around the Sun Period of Rotation Main Components of Atmosphere Mercury 57.9 km 88 days 59 days Virtually none Venus 108.2 km 224.7 days 243 days Carbon Dioxide Earth 149.6 km 365.3 days 23 hr. 56 min. Nitrogen, Oxygen Mars 227.9 km 687 days 24 hr. 37 min. Carbon Dioxide 1. Name each planet listed on the chart that has a year shorter than a year on Earth. Explain how you arrived at your answer. Mercury and Venus have a year that is shorter than Earth’s. The time it takes a planet to move around the sun determines the year. It takes Mercury only 88 days to move around the sun. It takes Venus 224.7 days to move around the sun. It takes Earth 365.3 days. 2. Name each planet on the chart with a cycle of light and dark that is shorter than Earth’s cycle of day and night. Which planet’s cycle is similar to Earth’s? Explain how you arrived at your answer. No planet listed on this chart has a day and night cycle that is shorter than Earth’s. The period of rotation gives the length of a planet’s day and night cycle. Earth’s cycle of day and night is 23 hours and 56 minutes. Mars cycle is similar at 24 hours and 37 minutes. 3. Name each planet from the chart that might support human life. Explain. No planet listed on this chart could support human life. Humans need oxygen to breathe and we are the only inner planet that has oxygen in its atmosphere. Mercury and Venus are closer to Sun and it would be too hot. Mars is farther from the Sun and it would be too cold. 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 SP 29 60 8th Grade Earth Science Vocabulary acid rain - Rain containing acids that form in the atmosphere when industrial gas emissions (especially sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides) combine with water. air mass - A large body of air with only small horizontal variations of temperature, pressure, and moisture. air pressure - The pressure exerted by the atmosphere. altitude - The height of a thing above a reference level, especially above sea level or above the earth's surface. anemometer - An instrument for measuring wind force and velocity. asteroid - Any of numerous small celestial bodies that revolve around the sun, with orbits lying chiefly between Mars and Jupiter and characteristic diameters between a few and several hundred kilometers. atmosphere - The gaseous mass or envelope surrounding a celestial body, especially the one surrounding the earth, and retained by the celestial body's gravitational field. axis - A straight line about which a body or geometric object rotates or may be conceived to rotate. basin – 1) A broad tract of land in which the rock strata are tilted toward a common center. 2) A large, bowl-shaped depression in the surface of the land or ocean floor. carbon - A naturally abundant nonmetallic element that occurs in many inorganic and in all organic compounds, exists freely as graphite and diamond and as a constituent of coal, limestone, and petroleum, and is capable of chemical self-bonding to form an enormous number of chemically, biologically, and commercially important molecules. cavern - A large underground chamber, as in a cave. cave - A hollow or natural passage under or into the earth, especially one with an opening to the surface. cementing - A building material made by grinding calcined limestone and clay to a fine powder, which can be mixed with water and poured to set as a solid mass or used as an ingredient in making mortar or concrete. clay - A fine-grained, firm earthy material that is plastic when wet and hardens when heated, consisting primarily of hydrated silicates of aluminum and widely used in making bricks, tiles, and pottery. cold front - The leading portion of a cold atmospheric air mass moving against and eventually replacing a warm air mass. comet - A celestial body, observed only in that part of its orbit that is relatively close to the sun, having a head consisting of a solid nucleus surrounded by a nebulous coma up to 2.4 million kilometers (1.5 million miles) in diameter and an elongated curved vapor tail arising from the coma when sufficiently close to the sun. Comets are thought to consist chiefly of ammonia, methane, carbon dioxide, and water. condensation - The process by which a gas or vapor changes to a liquid. 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 61 constellation - An arbitrary formation of stars perceived as a figure or design, especially one of 88 recognized groups named after characters from classical mythology and various common animals and objects. continental divide - An extensive stretch of high ground from each side of which the river systems of a continent flow in opposite directions. continental glacier - A broad ice sheet resting on a plain or plateau and spreading outward from a central n['e]v['e], or region of accumulation. comet - A celestial body, observed only in that part of its orbit that is relatively close to the sun, having a head consisting of a solid nucleus surrounded by a nebulous coma up to 2.4 million kilometers (1.5 million miles) in diameter and an elongated curved vapor tail arising from the coma when sufficiently close to the sun. Comets are thought to consist chiefly of ammonia, methane, carbon dioxide, and water. creek - A small stream, often a shallow or intermittent tributary to a river. crystallization - The formation of crystals or the assumption of a crystalline form. dam - A barrier constructed across a waterway to control the flow or raise the level of water. decomposition - The act or result of decomposing; disintegration. desert - An arid region with little or no vegetation. dew point - The temperature at which air becomes saturated and produces dew. dumping - To release or throw down in a large mass. eclipse - The partial or complete obscuring, relative to a designated observer, of one celestial body by another. elevation - Distance of something above a reference point (such as sea level); "there was snow at the higher elevations.” erosion – The condition in which the earth's surface is worn away by the action of water and wind and involves the movement of these particles away from the surface. evaporation - The change by which any substance is converted from a liquid state into and carried off in vapor. extinct - No longer existing or living. filtration – 1) The process whereby fluids pass through a filter or a filtering medium. 2) The act of changing a fluid by passing it through a filter. fog - Condensed water vapor in cloudlike masses lying close to the ground and limiting visibility. fossil - A remnant or trace of an organism of a past geologic age, such as a skeleton or leaf imprint, embedded and preserved in the earth's crust. glacier - A huge mass of ice slowly flowing over a land mass, formed from compacted snow in an area where snow accumulation exceeds melting and sublimation. gravel - An unconsolidated mixture of rock fragments or pebbles. gravity - The natural force of attraction between any two massive bodies; the natural force of attraction exerted by a celestial body, such as Earth, upon objects at or near its surface, tending to draw them toward the center of the body. groundwater - Water beneath the earth's surface, often between saturated soil and rock, that supplies wells and springs. hail - Precipitation in the form of spherical or irregular pellets of ice larger than 5 millimeters (0.2 inches) in diameter. humidity - Dampness, especially of the air. 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 62 humus - A brown or black organic substance consisting of partially or wholly decayed vegetable or animal matter that provides nutrients for plants and increases the ability of soil to retain water. igneous rock – Rock formed after molten rock solidifies. landfills - A method of solid waste disposal in which refuse is buried between layers of dirt so as to fill in or reclaim low-lying ground. lava - Molten rock that reaches the earth's surface through a volcano or fissure. magma - The molten rock material under the earth's crust, from which igneous rock is formed by cooling. mechanical weathering - The erosion or breakdown of rock into smaller fragments by natural physical agents with no chemicals involved; also called disintegration. metamorphic rock – Rock formed by the alteration of preexisting rock by heat and/or pressure. meteor - A bright trail or streak that appears in the sky when a meteoroid is heated to incandescence by friction with the earth's atmosphere. milky way - The galaxy containing the solar system, visible as a broad band of faint light in the night sky. mineral - A naturally occurring, homogeneous inorganic solid substance having a definite chemical composition and characteristic crystalline structure, color, and hardness. molecule - The smallest particle of a substance that retains the chemical and physical properties of the substance and is composed of two or more atoms. moon - The natural satellite of Earth, visible by reflection of sunlight and having a slightly elliptical orbit, approximately 356,000 kilometers (221,600 miles) distant at perigee and 406,997 kilometers (252,950 miles) at apogee. Its mean diameter is 3,475 kilometers (2,160 miles), its mass approximately one eightieth that of Earth, and its average period of revolution around Earth 29 days 12 hours 44 minutes calculated with respect to the sun. moon phase - One of the cyclically recurring apparent forms of the moon or a planet. orbit - The path of a celestial body or an artificial satellite as it revolves around another body. oxygen - A nonmetallic element constituting 21 percent of the atmosphere by volume that occurs as a diatomic gas. ozone - An unstable, poisonous allotrope of oxygen, O3, that is formed naturally in the ozone layer from atmospheric oxygen by electric discharge or exposure to ultraviolet radiation, also produced in the lower atmosphere by the photochemical reaction of certain pollutants. It is a highly reactive oxidizing agent used to deodorize air, purify water, and treat industrial wastes. planet - A non-luminous celestial body larger than an asteroid or comet, illuminated by light from a star, such as the sun, around which it revolves. In the solar system there are nine known planets: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, and Pluto. plain - An extensive, level, usually treeless area of land. plateau - An elevated, comparatively level expanse of land; a tableland. polar cap - Either of the regions around the poles of the earth that are permanently covered with ice. porous - Able to absorb fluids. 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 63 P 2 4 t 0 precipitation - Any form of water, such as rain, snow, sleet, or hail, that falls to the earth's surface. rain gauge - A device for measuring rainfall. relative humidity - The ratio of the amount of water vapor in the air at a specific temperature to the maximum amount that the air could hold at that temperature, expressed as a percentage. relief - The variations in elevation of an area of the earth's surface. relief map - A map that depicts land configuration, usually with contour lines. river - A large natural stream of water emptying into an ocean, lake, or other body of water and usually fed along its course by converging tributaries. rock cycle – All the processes of rocks forming, breaking down, reforming, and transportation taken together. rotation - The act or process of turning around a center or an axis. run off - To flow off; drain away; run off as waste; "The water wastes back into the ocean." sand - Small loose grains of worn or disintegrated rock. season - One of the four natural divisions of the year, spring, summer, fall, and winter, in the North and South Temperate zones. Each season, beginning astronomically at an equinox or solstice, is characterized by specific meteorological or climatic conditions. saturate - To soak, fill, or load to capacity. sedimentary rock – Rock formed when layers of sediment compact. sediments - Solid fragments of inorganic or organic material that come from the weathering of rock and are carried and deposited by wind, water, or ice. sewage - Liquid and solid waste carried off in sewers or drains. silt - A sedimentary material consisting of very fine particles intermediate in size between sand and clay. sleet - Precipitation consisting of generally transparent frozen or partially frozen raindrops. snowmelt - The runoff from melting snow. spring - A natural flow of ground water. stationary front - A transition zone between two nearly stationary air masses of different density. stream - A natural body of running water flowing on or under the earth. timelines - A representation or exhibit of key events within a particular historical period, often consisting of illustrative visual material accompanied by written commentary, arranged chronologically. topographic map - A map showing the relief features of the earth's surface, usu. by means of contour lines to show changes in elevation; also called topo map, topo quad, contour map. uplift - A rise of land to a higher elevation. warm front - A front along which an advancing mass of warm air rises over a mass of cold air. water table - The level below which the ground is completely saturated with water. water vapor - Water in a gaseous state. 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 64 weathering – The process by which rock fragments are broken down, transported, and deposited. wetland -A lowland area, such as a marsh or swamp, which is saturated with moisture. 8th Grade Earth Science Toolbox St. Clair County RESA 2006 65