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Published byKristin Clark Modified over 8 years ago
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PLANET EARTH CH. 21
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LAYERS Crust Mantle Outer Core Inner Core
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Crust Hard, solid rock Continental (thicker) & oceanic (thinner) Mantle Mostly solid & rigid At deeper levels, very hot & plastic (soft & deformable, like gum)
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Outer Core Mainly iron (Fe) & nickel (Ni) Liquid due to high temperature Inner Core Also Fe & Ni Solid because huge pressure forces the atoms together
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Continental Drift Theory Alfred Wegener 1915 - The Origins of the Continents and Oceans Continent “puzzle pieces” fit together “PANGAEA” Fossil & rock evidence
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PROBLEM: Did not explain the movement of continents
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Plate Tectonics Lithosphere – crust & upper mantle 9 large & several small pieces Moved by convection currents in the asthenosphere (deeper mantle)?
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Plate Boundaries Divergent – moving apart Mid-ocean ridges Convergent – moving together Subduction (NA & Pacific) Mountains & volcanoes (Everest & Himalayas) Transform Fault Earthquakes (California)
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Earthquakes Vibrations from rock rubbing together d. focus – exact point inside Earth where an earthquake happens d. epicenter – point on Earth’s surface directly above the focus
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E’quakes – 1973-Mar. 2011
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Seismic waves Surface – cause surface damage Primary (P) – longitudinal (slinky or spring) Secondary (S) – transverse (rope) Richter scale
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d. volcano – an opening in Earth’s crust through which magma emerges; also called vents Shield (Mauna Loa) Composite/Strato (Mt. Fuji, Mt. St. Helen’s) Cinder cone (Parícutin)
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Parinacota, Chile/Bolivia
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Lassen Volcanic Park, NM
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Mount Belknap, OR
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Mapping the Surface Latitude: measures distance from equator N/S like a “ladder” going up & down Longitude: measures distance from Prime Meridian E/W What’s that? What’s the international date line? Time zones?
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Mapping the Surface
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