Earth Science Rocks! Warm up October 23

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Earth Science Rocks! Warm up October 23 Put your homework on your seat number, then do the warm up. Question: These two photos were taken from the same place 63 years apart. How are they alike? How are they different? 1941 2004

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Earth Science Rocks! Warm up October 23. Put your homework on your seat number, then do the warm up. Question: These two photos were taken from the same place 63 years apart. How are they alike? How are they different? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Earth Science Rocks! Warm up October 23

Page 1: Earth Science Rocks! Warm up October 23

Earth Science Rocks!Warm up October 23

Put your homework on your seat number, then do the warm up.Question: These two photos were taken from the same place 63

years apart. How are they alike? How are they different?

1941 2004

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Ag Upsala Glacier, South America

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Grinnell Glacier, Montana

• 1935 • 2005

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South Cascade Glacier, Washington

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Tropical storm Sandy13N, 78 W

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Earth Science Rocks!

• MYP Unit Question: How does land change?

• Area of Interaction: Environment

• Learner Profile: Caring and Principled

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Earth Science Rocks!

• Standard: Investigate the scientific view of how the Earth’s surface is formed.

• Learning Target: Today I am learning about erosion by ice and wind because I will know how to protect my mountain house or beach house.

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Erosion by Ice

• A glacier is a huge mass of ice and snow that moves over land. It erodes and deposits large amounts of rock material.

• p. 352-356

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How glaciers form

• Glaciers form in very cold areas. The snow piles up year after year.

• Over time, the weight of the snow packs the snow and forms a giant mass of ice.

• Gravity causes them to flow slowly like a “river of ice”

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Glacier ice is the largest reservoir of fresh water on the planet, storing an estimated 75 percent

of the world’s supply

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A glacier can range in length from the equivalent of a football field to more than 100 miles.

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The Antarctic ice sheet is actually a glacier. If it were to melt, sea levels would rise 210

feet

NASA image of Antartica taken from space

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Though it sits on the equator, Mount Kilimanjaro is glaciated

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• A single glacier ice crystal can grow to be as large as a baseball

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Mountain valleys are typically “V” shaped before being taken oven by a glacier; during glaciation, the valley

widens and deepens and becomes “U” shaped.

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Alaska is estimated to have more than 100,000 glaciers. Most remain unnamed.

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Erosion by Wind

• Wind carries and deposits sediment. Deserts, coastlines, and areas with little plant coverage are the most affected by wind erosion.

• p. 350-351

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Sand dunes at the beach

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leeward leewardwindward

Piles of sand deposited by wind - Leeward side has a steeper slope

Sand Dunes

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Sand Dunes in the desert

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Barchan dunes of the Namib Desert

Crescent shaped dunes formed from a unidirectional (one-direction) wind.

Barchan dune east of Gilf Kebir Plateau Saudi Arabia

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Ripple marks are miniature dunes within a dune (not more than 2 inches tall). Formed by cross winds and appear to be traveling in a different direction than the large dune.

Hueco Bolson Desert – Texas

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The Dust Bowl of the 1930s

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Rock formations in the Wadi Desert in Egypt

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Formed when wind and water weather (erode) softer material first. Arches National Canyon, Utah

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Wind carries fine particles that work like a sand blaster (i.e. sand, silt, clay, and ice particles)

Ventifact on Mt. Falconer - Canada

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Formed in arid environments when wind carries finer, more lightweight particles such as sand away. Large particles are left behind and protect from further erosion

Desert pavement

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Yellowish, fine grained silt and clay sized particles formed by glaciers millions of years ago; carried and deposited by wind.

Loess Deposits - Banks, Pennsylvania

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Base of a rock is weathered and eroded more quickly due to sand blasting.

Sand grains can only be picked up a couple of feet.

Pedestal rockAfrica