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Published byShona Sheryl Cobb Modified over 9 years ago
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(Write this) If everything is made of atoms…
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and atoms combine to make molecules,…
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…which in turn move about based on whether they are a solid, liquid or gas,…
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…and these molecules or particles position themselves in a mixture based on their density (amt. of stuff in a given space), …
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…and we recognize that Earth is made of larger particles called rocks…
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? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? Outer Core Troposphere Mantle Exosphere Upper Mantle Inner Core Crust Stratosphere Mesosphere Thermosphere ?
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Thermosphere: 100-400 km Meteorites burn up and Aurora Borealis found Mesosphere: 25-100 km Stratosphere: 10-25 km Ozone layer that protects from harmful UV found Troposphere: 0-10 km closest to the earth
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Carbon Dioxide 1.562 g/ml Oxygen 1.429 g/ml Argon 1.784g/ml Nitrogen 1.251 g/ml Hydrogen.085 g/ml
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What we think we know, comes from a study of how earthquake (seismic) waves travel through the earth, and how long it takes for them to get from where the earthquake happens to a recording station.
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The basic idea is that different materials transmit seismic waves at different speeds. With a lot of earthquakes and a lot of recording stations, geophysicists are beginning to get a pretty detailed picture of what is probably down there.
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One of the most distinctive features of the earth's interior is how it seems to be layered with the heaviest stuff in the center, and the lightest material at the surface.
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In fact, the earth probably looks a lot like a hard boiled egg if you could cut it open. The yellow stuff in the center (the yolk) relates to what we call the core. Most geophysicists think that the core is composed of high density materials like iron and nickel.
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The egg's shell is like the earth's crust - a thin veneer of rigid, low density material at the surface.
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And all the white stuff in between is like the earth's mantle - the largest layer which, in the case of the earth, is of medium density, and, in the case of an egg, tastes best with a bit of salt and pepper.
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The core seems to be in two parts - a "solid" inner core with a "liquid" outer layer - and is the final resting place for as much of the high density material as can get there..
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The crust is REAL thin relative to the size of the earth - much, much thinner than an eggshell, and is of much lower density than the core.
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It is probable that the mantle represents the vast majority of the earth's mass which is still trying to figure out if it is heavy enough to be accepted at the core, or is lower in density and therefore has to float about on the surface with the rest of the scum
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LayerMaterialDensity Continental Crust Silicon/ oxygen 2.7 g/cm3 Oceanic Crust Iron / Magnesium 3.0 g/cm3 MantleIron/ Magnesium 3.3 g/cm3 Outer CoreLiquid Iron/Nickel 9.9 g/cm3 Inner CoreSolid Iron/Nickel 12.6 g/cm3 12.6 g/cm3 2.7 g/cm3 3.0 g/cm3 9.9 g/cm3 3.3 g/cm3 ? ? ? ? ?
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Tectonic Processes http://vss.sd22.bc.ca/hpp/courses/geo12/course_material/unit3/U03L01.htm http://vss.sd22.bc.ca/hpp/courses/geo12/course_material/unit3/U03L01.htm Visual Dictionary Online http://visual.merriam-webster.com/earth/geology/structure-earth.php http://visual.merriam-webster.com/earth/geology/structure-earth.php World of Teaching www.worldofteaching.com www.worldofteaching.com Ask Geoman http://jersey.uoregon.edu/~mstrick/AskGeoMan/geoQuerry57.html http://jersey.uoregon.edu/~mstrick/AskGeoMan/geoQuerry57.html Earth’s Structure http://mediatheek.thinkquest.nl/~ll125/en/struct.htm http://mediatheek.thinkquest.nl/~ll125/en/struct.htm Quezi ‘Now You Know’ http://quezi.com/11983 http://quezi.com/11983 My ScienceBox http://www.mysciencebox.org/node/559 http://www.mysciencebox.org/node/559
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