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I.Layers of the Earth II.Plate Tectonics III.Continental Drift
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Earth- 3 rd rock from the sun …
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Vital Statistics Age= Orbit = Rotation= 70% Water Pole to Pole 12,714 km 4.6 billion years 365.24 days 23 hours 56 min
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Vital Statistics Equator 12,756 km 199 million square miles One of the Terrestrial planets (Earth, Mars, Mercury, Venus)…with a small mass
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…as opposed to the GAS Giants
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Earth’s Unique Features Only planet with Continental Drift Only planet where the surface can be in the form of a liquid, solid and gas.
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Earth’s Interior Crust Mantle Core –Inner –Outer
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Temperature and pressure _________ as you approach the center. Increase
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Differentiation The Earth’s layers represent differentiation. Heavier metals are in the center (core), lighter rocks such as silicates are in the (crust.)
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Crust Outermost layer Thinnest layer Land/ocean floor 5-40 km thick
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Crust Thinnest, outside layer Continental crust 20-40 miles thick Oceanic crust 3 miles thick Mostly Granite and Basalt
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2 types of crust Oceanic- basalt material, dark, dense Continental- granite, less dense, light in color
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Mantle Iron, Magnesium Not liquid, not solid (taffy) Plate tectonic activity 1,800 miles thick
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Mantle Hot rock Taffy like Upper mantle and Crust = lithosphere Lower mantle- hotter, more pressure, becomes solid= asthenosphere
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Heavier materials sink while lighter materials are pushed higher to a surface…
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Core 1) Liquid core- (outer core) thick metal, magnetic field. 2- Solid core- (inner core- increase in pressure, dense, solid)
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Core 1) Inner core 9000 degrees F. Solid due to the pressure! 2) Outer core 8100 degrees F. Liquid Nickel/Iron currents Magnetic fields
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Plate Tectonics Heat causes motion. Hot air rises- it’s less dense and cool air sinks. This process is called https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ryrXAG Y1dmE
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This heat source from the Earth causes…
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1912 Albert Wegener https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T1- cES1Ekto http://www.nytimes.com/video/opinion/1000 00003515124/animated-life- pangaea.html?smid=nytcore-ipad- share&smprod=nytcore-ipad
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Pangea https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=swRFn Pq-lJo
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uGcDe d4xVD4
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And Pangea II?
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Rifting As hot liquids rise to the surface it pulls the crust along with it (think of soup, pudding or coffee scum).
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Subduction “sub” meaning under or below. One piece of crust goes under another.
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When two pieces of crust get stuck under one another pressure begins to build and eventually an Earthquake can happen!
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We call major rifting/subduction zones Plates
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Earthquakes 1:30 seconds More 3000 move Earth’s crust Hundreds move measurable distances 20 severe damage
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Earthquake “shaking of the Earth’s crust”- energy is released through friction as stress builds up along fault lines/tectonic plates. Lithosphere Secondary issues https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PwtFu G_M4EE
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Other causes of Earthquakes
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Earthquakes can occur at various depths Shallow (less than 30 km) occur with sliding/spreading plates Deep (up to 700 km) subduction
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Focus- point where fault/plate movement occurs *in Earth’s layers Epicenter- surface point above focus *on Earth’s surface
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Earthquake Waves 3 main type of seismic waves Body waves (travel through Earth) S/P (Primary and Secondary Waves) Surface Waves (travel at surface of Earth) L (Love waves) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yOGoK CK17a4&list=PL9AC95ABE68FEB57E&ind ex=4
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Seismometer Tool used to measure seismic waves https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bpFzICi WPwA
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Locating the epicenter https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KL- dHbFA8WU Scientists use triangulation to find an epicenter (point where all three circles meet) Scientists track differences in P/S waves and use that to create a circle.
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Charles Richter 1940’s Created a scale to measure the energy released from an earthquake.
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Volcano! A quick review!
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Volcano! Weak spot in the crust where magma (molten material) comes to the surface. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jRfEGv p6wDU
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Magma Mixture of rock forming substances, gases, and water vapor from the mantle.
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Lava Magma that reaches the surface
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Viscosity Resistance to “flow” (usually liquids) High viscosity materials flow slowly Low viscosity materials flow __________ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3KU_sk fdZVQ
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Think about it… Which of these materials has a higher viscosity? Which of these materials has a lower viscosity?
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Think about it What affect do you predict temperature has on the viscosity of a material knowing what you know about temperature and energy… How would this variable relate to volcanos?
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How does viscosity relate to volcanos? Volcanos range in size, shape, and type of eruptions that occur! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DnBggr CdkN0
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