Maps Pg. 21
Overview of Earth Science Formation of Earth- nebular hypothesis; formed from a rotating cloud made of H and He 4 major spheres- Hydrosphere: all water on Earth Atmosphere- gasses surrounding Earth Geosphere- Rocks, minerals, the interior Biosphere- all life on Earth
Determining location Use two measurements to measure location: latitude and longitude Measured in degrees Latitude is position north or south of the equator (lines run horizontally) 0-90 degrees N & S Longitude is position east or west of the prime meridian (lines run vertically) 0 and 180 degrees W & E
Global Grid Equator marks 0o latitude Divide northern and southern hemispheres Prime meridian marks 0o longitude Divides eastern and western hemispheres Runs through Greenwich, England Can mark absolute location of something Latitude then longitude (32o N, 81o W)
Globes Accurate way to map Earth in the way it truly is, just scaled down Problem: not specific enough to be useful for everyday
The Mercator Projection Gerardus Mercator created the map to help sailors navigate around Earth Lines of longitude are parallel Sizes and distances distorted, but directions accurate
Robinson Projection map Show most distances, sizes, and shapes accurately. Distortions around the edges Shows whole globe as a flat map
Conic Projection Maps Made by wrapping a cone of paper around a certain latitude Almost no distortion along line of latitude, but much away Used to make road and weather maps
Gnomonic Projections Place a piece of paper on a globe so it touches one point Points and lines are then projected on the paper Shows with accuracy the shortest distance between two points
Topographic maps Represents Earth’s 3D surface in 2D Shows elevation using contour lines Also show water, roads, buildings, political boundaries, etc. Very useful
Contour lines Every position along a single line represents the same elevation Every 5th line is bold and has the elevation labeled called index contour Contour interval tells you difference between adjacent lines Form a V when crossing a stream Apex of the V points up stream
Steepness Can be determined by examining closeness of lines Closer the lines, steeper the slope Contour lines that form a circle represent a hill A depression is represented by circles with hash marks that point to the center Lines never intersect unless there is a vertical cliff
Scale Need to represent large areas Scale them down Use ratios to represent scale (1:24,000) Bar scales are represented on maps so you ca measure distance
Geologic Maps Shows the type and age of exposed rocks Each rock formation is assigned a color and sometimes a pattern