Constructive & Destructive Forces

45
Constructive & Destructive Forces

description

Constructive & Destructive Forces. EQ: What is the difference between a Constructive Force and a Destructive Force?. Constructive Forces- Natural forces that build or construct landforms and cause changes in the Earth’s surface. Examples: Volcanoes-Delta Deposition-Faults - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Constructive & Destructive Forces

Page 1: Constructive & Destructive Forces

Constructive & Destructive

Forces

Page 2: Constructive & Destructive Forces

EQ: What is the difference between a Constructive Force and a Destructive Force?

Page 3: Constructive & Destructive Forces

• Constructive Forces- Natural forces that build or construct landforms and cause changes in the Earth’s surface.

• Examples:– Volcanoes -Delta

– Deposition -Faults

– Earthquakes -Sand Dunes

Page 4: Constructive & Destructive Forces

Constructive ForcesConstructive Forces

• Constructive forces affect the earth's surface by building it up to form new landforms like mountains and islands.

• Examples of these type of forces are:• Deposition is the dropping off of bits of eroded

rock. This process helps to build up Earth’s surface by filling in depressions, or basins.

• Earthquakes• Volcanoes

Page 5: Constructive & Destructive Forces

• Destructive Forces – Natural forces that destroy landforms and causes damaging changes in the Earth’s surface. - Earthquakes - Glaciers– Weathering/Erosion - Landslides

– Volcanoes - Tsunami

Page 6: Constructive & Destructive Forces

Earthquakes:

• Shaking that results from the movement of rock (tectonic plates) beneath Earth’s surface

• Destructive force or Constructive force

• Most occur because of moving crust

Page 7: Constructive & Destructive Forces

Earthquakes causes vibration across the ground, sending shock waves that crumble buildings.http://jclahr.com/alaska/aeic/taurho/eqeffects/eqtsun.mov

Page 8: Constructive & Destructive Forces

Stress:

• Force that acts on rock to change its shape and volume

• Energy is stored in the rock until it breaks or changes shape

Page 9: Constructive & Destructive Forces

Faults:

• Break in Earth’s crust where slabs of crust slip past each other

• When stress builds up, the rock breaks along a fault

• Usually occur along plate boundaries

Page 10: Constructive & Destructive Forces

3 Main Types of Faults:

1. Strike-Slip – Rocks on each side slide past each other with little (or no) up & down motion

- Transform boundaries

- Caused by Shearing

- San Andreas (California)

Page 11: Constructive & Destructive Forces
Page 12: Constructive & Destructive Forces
Page 13: Constructive & Destructive Forces
Page 14: Constructive & Destructive Forces
Page 15: Constructive & Destructive Forces

Measuring Quakes:

• Seismograph –

• instrument used to measure the vibrations and seismic waves of earthquakes.

Page 16: Constructive & Destructive Forces

Rating Scales used for Quakes:

2. Richter – Rate quakes according to the size of the seismic waves

- low ---> high (1-9)

-each # is 10x stronger

- humans cannot feel a quake below 2

- 6 or more = major quake

- Measures magnitude

Page 17: Constructive & Destructive Forces
Page 18: Constructive & Destructive Forces

Misc. Info:

• Tsunami • – a series of seismic sea

waves- result from underwater

earthquakes, landslides, or volcanic eruptions

Page 19: Constructive & Destructive Forces

Volcanoes:• Destructive AND Constructive• Weak spot in the crust where molten

material from the mantle comes to the surface

• Magma – Hot molten rock located Below ground.

• Lava – magma that reaches the surface.

Page 20: Constructive & Destructive Forces

Volcanoes can quickly change the Earth, too, by pouring out hot, liquid rock called lava.

Page 21: Constructive & Destructive Forces

Pahoehoe

Aa

Page 22: Constructive & Destructive Forces
Page 23: Constructive & Destructive Forces
Page 24: Constructive & Destructive Forces

Weathering:

• Process that breaks down rock & other substances at the Earth’s surface- very slow process

• Temperature, Water, & gases in the atmosphere all contribute to weathering

Page 25: Constructive & Destructive Forces

2 Types of Weathering:

1. Mechanical

2. Chemical

Page 26: Constructive & Destructive Forces

Mechanical Weathering:

• Process by which rock is physically broken into smaller pieces

• Small pieces have same material as the original rock

• Very slow occurrence

Page 27: Constructive & Destructive Forces

• The most common type of mechanical weathering is the constant freezing, and thawing of water. In liquid form, water is able to penetrate the many holes and joints within a rock. As the temperature drops water freezes and expands, becoming about 10% larger than it was in liquid form. The result is that the holes and cracks in rocks are pushed outward. Even the strongest rocks are no match for this force.

Page 28: Constructive & Destructive Forces

Rock split apart by Mechanical Rock split apart by Mechanical weathering.weathering.

Page 29: Constructive & Destructive Forces
Page 30: Constructive & Destructive Forces
Page 31: Constructive & Destructive Forces

Mechanical Weathering:• Caused by…(Agents)

– Freezing and Thawing– Release of Pressure– Growth of Plants

– Abrasion – Grinding away of rock by other rock particles that are

carried by water, ice, wind, or gravity

Page 32: Constructive & Destructive Forces

Chemical Weathering:

• Breaks down rock through chemical changes- Chemical properties are actually changed.

• Rock particles have different mineral make-up than original rock

Page 33: Constructive & Destructive Forces

Stalactites

Stalagmites

Stalactites & Stalagmites created by acid rain falling into these limestone caverns.

Page 34: Constructive & Destructive Forces
Page 35: Constructive & Destructive Forces
Page 36: Constructive & Destructive Forces

Erosion:• Process by which natural forces

move weathered rock & soil from one place to another (by wind, water, ice, & gravity)

• Sediment

•Material moved by weathering and erosion

Page 37: Constructive & Destructive Forces

Mass Movement:

• Deposition

• Caused by gravity

• Occurs where bits of rock are dropped off (deposited) because of erosion

• On land sediment can be moved down hill by:– Landslide– Mudslide

Page 38: Constructive & Destructive Forces

Landslide:

• Most destructive

• When rock & soil slide quickly down a steep slope

Page 39: Constructive & Destructive Forces

Mudslide

Page 40: Constructive & Destructive Forces

Technology andTechnology andHuman InterventionsHuman Interventions

• Humans try to CONTROL these forces.

– seismological studies – flood control (dams, levees, storm drain

management, etc.) – beach reclamation (Georgia coastal islands)

Page 41: Constructive & Destructive Forces

Seismological StudiesSeismological Studies• Scientists study earthquakes so that they can

understand how they work and so that they can try to predict future quakes.

• Earthquakes are recorded by instruments called “seismographs”.

• A short wiggly line means a small earthquake and a large one means a large earthquake.

Page 42: Constructive & Destructive Forces
Page 43: Constructive & Destructive Forces

Flood ControlFlood Control

• The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers began constructing dams in Georgia for navigation and flood control in the 1940s and 1950s under the Flood Control Act of 1944 and the Watershed Protection and Flood Prevention Act of 1954.

Page 44: Constructive & Destructive Forces

Flood Control MethodsFlood Control Methods

• Dams control the water flow in a stream or river.

• A levee is an embankment designed to prevent the flooding of a river.

• Storm drains are for carrying off rainfall drained from paved surfaces, roofs, etc.

Page 45: Constructive & Destructive Forces

Beach ReclamationBeach Reclamation• Weather, waves and wind cause the

coastline to wash away.

• Keeping sand dunes intact helps to keep the beaches from eroding.