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Great Ideas in Science: Lecture 9 – Earth as a Planet Professor Robert Hazen UNIV 301 Great Idea: Earth, one of the planets that orbits the Sun, formed 4.5 billion years ago from a great cloud of dust and gas.
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Today: Key Ideas About Earth 1.Earth, one of the planets that orbits the Sun, formed 4.5 billion years ago from a great cloud of dust and gas. 2. The surface of our planet changes constantly; no feature is permanent. 3. The entire Earth is still changing, due to the slow convection of soft, hot rocks deep within the planet. 4. Earth materials move in cycles; a change in one cycle affects others.
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Clues to the Origin of the Solar System Solar System = Objects gravitationally bound to the Sun
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Clue #1: Planetary Orbits Features of solar system –All planets orbit in the same direction –All planets orbit in the same plane –Most planets rotate in the direction of orbit
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Clue #2: Distribution of Mass Almost all mass is in the Sun (99.9%) Two types of planets –Terrestrial planets –Jovian planets Other objects –Moons, asteroids, comets
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The Nebular Hypothesis
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Terrestrial (Inner) Planets Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars –Rocky and relatively small –Mercury and Venus too hot for life –Mars may have had life long ago
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Terrestrial (Inner) Planets Mars Exploration –Multiple missions –Found evidence of water
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Jovian (Outer) Planets Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune
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Jovian (Outer) Planets Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune –Layered structure –No solid surface
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Pluto and the Plutoids –Only 0.3% of Earth’s mass –Three moons –Captured comet or asteroid? –Is it a planet?
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Asteroids, Comets, and Meteors Asteroids Small rocky bodies Orbit sun Asteroid belt Comets Dirty snowballs Highly elongated orbits Stardust and Deep Impact missions Meteors and Meteorites Meteor showers Original solar system material
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The Formation of Earth The Great Bombardment
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Differentiation Heat produced from collisions Dense material sank to center Lighter material rose to surface Layered structure –Core –Mantle –Crust
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The Formation of the Moon “Big Splash” Large object impacted Earth Parts of mantle blown into orbit Moon formed from this material
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The Formation of the Moon “Big Splash”
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The Evolution of Earth’s Atmosphere 1.Volcanoes released N 2, CO 2, H 2, & H 2 O 2.Large impacts blew off most atmosphere 3.Hydrogen lost by gravitational escape 4.Living organisms introduced oxygen
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Volcanoes and Earthquakes: Evidence of Earth’s Inner Forces Volcanoes: Magma breaks through surface
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Volcanoes and Earthquakes: Evidence of Earth’s Inner Forces Earthquakes –Rocks breaks along fault –Energy transmitted as wave –Tsunamis
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The Case of the Disappearing Mountains Young Old
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Deep Time James Hutton at Jedburgh Scotland ca.1790
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Deep Time 1.Sediments 2.Burial 3.Uplift 4.Sediments
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Plate Tectonics Great Idea: Earth is constantly changing, due to the slow convection of soft, hot rocks deep within the planet.
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Plate tectonics – 6 lines of evidence 1.Physiology: Similar shapes of continents
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Plate tectonics – 6 lines of evidence 1.Physiology: Shape of continents 2.Seismology: Earth’s inner structure
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Plate tectonics – 6 lines of evidence 1.Physiology: Shape of continents 2.Seismology: Earth’s inner structure 3.Geology: Distribution of rocks and fossils
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Plate tectonics – 6 lines of evidence 1.Physiology: Shape of continents 2.Seismology: Earth’s inner structure 3.Geology: Distribution of rocks and fossils 4.Oceanography: Sea floor topography Bruce Heezen and Marie Tharp
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Plate tectonics – 6 lines of evidence 1.Physiology: Shape of continents 2.Seismology: Earth’s inner structure 3.Geology: Distribution of rocks and fossils 4.Oceanography: Sea floor topography 5.Volcanology: Ages of Atlantic volcanoes 125 55 75 95 <5
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Plate tectonics – 6 lines of evidence 1.Physiology: Shape of continents 2.Seismology: Earth’s inner structure 3.Geology: Distribution of rocks and fossils 4.Oceanography: Sea floor topography 5.Volcanology: Ages of Atlantic volcanoes 6.Paleomagnetismof sea floor rocks
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New Support for Plate Tectonics Measurements of the distance between continents North America and Europe are separating at ~5 cm per year
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Earth’s Tectonic Plates
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Plate Boundaries Three Main Boundary Types – Divergent – Convergent – Transform
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Divergent Boundaries
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Convergent Plate Boundaries Three Types: 1. Ocean-ocean
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Convergent Plate Boundaries Three Types: 1. Ocean-ocean 2. Continent-continent
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Convergent Plate Boundaries Three Types: 1. Ocean-ocean 2. Continent-continent 3. Ocean-continent
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Transform Plate Boundary
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Another Look at Volcanoes and Earthquakes Volcanoes Occur: 1. At Divergent Plate Boundaries 2. Close to Convergent Plate Boundaries 3. Above Hotspots
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Another Look at Volcanoes and Earthquakes Earthquakes Occur at: 1.Transform Plate Boundaries 2.Convergent boundaries
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Earth’s Geochemical Cycles Earth materials move in cycles; a change in one cycle affects the others. 1. Atoms recycle; they’re used over and over. Reservoirs (Aluminum can) Hydrologic cycle Atmospheric cycle Rock cycle 2. Energy flows through the system.
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Geochemical Cycles Account for all the repositories of that substance. Document processes by which the substance moves from repository to another. Gold
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ROCK CYCLE: Igneous Rocks Igneous Rocks –Solidify from hot liquid Types –Extrusive rocks solidify at the surface –Intrusive rocks solidify below surface
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ROCK CYCLE: Sedimentary Rocks Rocks deposited layer by layer from weathered particles (sand, silt, etc.) or chemicals (i.e., coral).
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ROCK CYCLE: Metamorphic Rocks Rocks formed by pressure and heat Examples –Slate –Schist –Gneiss –Quartzite –Marble
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Atmospheric Cycle Air mass: Uniform temperature and moisture Weather: State of the atmosphere Climate: Long-term average of weather
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The General Circulation of the Atmosphere Circulation powered by Sun –Air heated and rises –Cools and sinks Prevailing winds –Caused by earth’s rotation
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Weather Five variables define state of atmosphere –Temperature –Air pressure –Humidity –Cloudiness –Prevailing winds
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Climate Gradual change over long periods Influences on climate –Large bodies of water –Ocean currents –Mountain ranges –Position of tectonic plates –Solar output –Greenhouse gases
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The Water (Hydrologic) Cycle The total amount of Earth’s water is constant; the same atoms cycle from one reservoir to another Total volume ~ 1.4 billion km 3 Oceans 97.3% Lakes and Rivers 0.01% Groundwater 0.6% Ice Caps & Glaciers 2.1% Atmosphere 0.001% All life 0.00004%
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How does water move among reservoirs?
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Ocean Currents Redistribute heat across planet
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Ice Ages As the ice caps and glaciers grow, the sea level drops. Cycle tied to Earth’s tilt and orbit
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Two facts about water use A human requires about 2 liters of water per day to survive The average American uses about 6,000 liters of water per day
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The Water Table The water table will drop when discharge exceeds recharge (like a bank) In the US we “mine” about 100,000,000 gallons of water every day (more than the recharge) Artificial recharge helps Urbanization and pollution hurt
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