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Published byMeagan Thornton Modified over 9 years ago
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Chapter 4.1: Earth’s Formation
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Earth formed from a whirling cloud of gas and debris into a multilayered sphere, which has since been losing heat.
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The study of the planet Earth: It’s structure Composition How it has changed over time The Earth as we know it is the result of changes that have occurred over billions of years (It didn’t get like this over night)
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Nebular Hypothesis (most widely accepted) About 4.6 billion years ago…. A large cloud of gas and dust began rotating slowly in space As time passed, the cloud shrank under the pull of its own gravity. The rate of rotation increased as it shrank Most of the material in the cloud gathered around the center The compression of the material made its interior so hot hydrogen fusion occurred Result: the sun and planetismals were born Over time: nearly all of the material from the original cloud became orbiting planets as well See: Origin of Solar System AnimationOrigin of Solar System Animation
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Earth is not a perfect sphere – oblate spheroid Sphere that bulges in the center Cause: the spinning motion of the Earth How do scientists know this? They can measure the weight (in Newtons) of an object at several places on the Earth’s surface Recall: the weight of an object, in Newtons, is the force with which gravity pulls an object toward the center of the Earth The further an object is from the center, the lighter it is, and the closer, the heavier it is
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An object at the North or South Poles weighs 195 Newtons At the equator, that same object weight 194 Newtons What does this evidence tell you? An object is closer to the Earth’s center at the poles than the equator If Earth were a perfect sphere an object would be the same distance from the center at ALL points and so would the object’s weight!!!
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29% land or 149 million square miles 71% water or 361 million square miles Earth’s original surface was very similar to the surface of the moon Earth was most likely composed of the same material from the surface all the way to the center
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Video Wrap Up Video Wrap Up
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Events that formed Earth produced heat Heat came from: Meteorite impacts Weight of overlying materials caused compression in Earth’s interior Decay of radioactive isotopes
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Reasons: Some rocks lose heat more quickly than others The thickness of the crustal rock varies from place to place The percentage of radioactive materials in rocks varies
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Earth’s Magnetic Field Imagine a bar magnetic inside the Earth tilted 11 degrees away from the poles The field is the resulting lines of force that loop from one end of the bar magnet to the other 11 degree tilt explains why the magnetic north pole and geographic north pole are not in exactly the same place North end = attracting = positive end South end = repelling = negative end
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