The Grand Canyon

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The Grand Canyon By: Leah Bahlman

description

The Grand Canyon. By: Leah Bahlman. Water. How was the Grand Canyon formed? The Colorado River cuts through the Colorado Plateau. For 6 million years, the water has been wearing down the rock. The river also carries away the broken particles of rock. Superposition. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of The Grand Canyon

Page 1: The Grand Canyon

The Grand Canyon

By: Leah Bahlman

Page 2: The Grand Canyon

Water

• How was the Grand Canyon formed? The Colorado River cuts through the Colorado Plateau. For 6 million years, the water has been wearing down the rock. The river also carries away the broken particles of rock.

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Superposition

• The oldest layer of rock is at the bottom.• The newest layer of rock is at the top.• A geologist is a scientist who studies rocks.• Geologists look at rock layers to find out how

old the rocks are.• A geologic time scale is a record of the

geologic events and life forms in Earth’s history.

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History lesson

• The walls of the Grand Canyon in Arizona show 2 billion years of Earth’s history.

• If I went down into the Grand Canyon I would see sandstone and limestone. The deeper I go the older the rocks are.

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Fossils

• Fossils are the preserved remains or traces of living things.

• Most fossils form when living things die and are buried by sediments.

• Paleontologists are scientists who study fossils.

• There are many fossils in the Grand Canyon.

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Grand Canyon

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Colorado river

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Rock layers of the Grand Canyon

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Erosion and Deposition

• Erosion is the process by which water, ice, wind, or gravity moves weathered rock and soil.

• Deposition is the process in which sediment is laid down in new locations.

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Map of the Grand Canyon

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Grand Canyon pictures

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The rock cycle

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Sedimentary Rock

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Fossils

Fossils are the preserved remains or traces of living things.

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glacier

• Glacier is a large mass of moving ice and snow on land.

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Colorado RiverA river is a large stream

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weathering

• Weathering is the chemical and physical processes that break down rock at earth’s surface.

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Grand Canyon Facts

• The Grand Canyon is 277 miles long. And up to 18 miles wide. It is one mile deep. The Grand Canyon National Park is in Arizona.