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Movements of the Earth’s Crust . Harcourt Science Unit D Chapter 1. Mrs.Strand 6th grade Lockwood Middle School. What are the Earth’s Layers?. Terms: Crust Mantle Core Lithosphere Asthenosphere Plate Tectonics. What are the Earth’s Layers?. Earth’s Plates & How they move.
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Movements of the Earth’s Crust Harcourt Science Unit D Chapter 1 Mrs.Strand 6th grade Lockwood Middle School
What are the Earth’s Layers? Terms: Crust Mantle Core Lithosphere Asthenosphere Plate Tectonics
Earth’s Plates & How they move http://science.enotes.com/images/earth/woes_02_img0118.jpg Look in book pg D8 for names
Changes to the Earth’s Surface Erosion Wind Water Glacier Falling Space Material Meteorites
How the Earth’s Plates Move Terms: Divergent boundary Convergent boundary Transform fault boundary Mid-ocean Ridge Rift Sea-floor Spreading
How Earth’s Plates Move Divergent Boundary Mid-ocean ridges May also occur on continents (Africa)
How Earth’s Plates Move Convergent Boundaries Crust is absorbed at convergent boundaries 1. Ocean plate collides with another ocean plate Causes deep trenches (mariana trench in the Phillipines) 2.Continental plates collide Forms some of the highest mountains in the world (himalayas) 3. Oceanic plate collides with a continental plate Forms mountains and volcanoes 80% of volcanoes and 90% of earthquakes occur on convergent boundaries.
How Earth’s Plates Move Transform Fault Boundaries Two plates move past each other in opposite directions. Most occur in oceanic crust. San Andreas fault Earthquakes are common along these boundaries Mountains are very common
Earth’s Surface Changes Over Time http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/geology/anim4.html
Earthquakes and Volcanoes Terms: Earthquake Focus Epicenter P wave S wave Surface Wave Richter Scale Volcano
Earthquakes & Volcanoes Plate movements cause earthquakes One million earthquakes each year. Only about 200 earthquakes cause damage. Earthquake waves P waves= faster, “push-pull” motion S waves= slower, vibrations at 90° to the direction of travel Surface waves= travel only at the earth’s surface and are the slowest waves
Earthquakes & Volcanoes Earthquake Measurement Two ways to Measure Earthquakes: The Modified Mercalli Scale expresses the intensity of an earthquake's effects in a given locality in values ranging from I to XII. The Richter scale is logarithmic so that a recording of 7, for example, indicates a disturbance with ground motion 10 times as large as a recording of 6.
Earthquakes & Volcanoes How volcanoes form: Along convergent boundaries
Earthquakes & Volcanoes Types of Volcanoes Among the different kinds of volcanoes are: * shield volcanoes Unlike the composite volcanoes which are tall and thin, shield volcanoes are tall and broad, with flat, rounded shapes. * cinder cones Cinder cones are simple volcanoes which have a bowl-shaped crater at the summit and only grow to about a thousand feet, the size of a hill. They usually are created of eruptions from a single opening. * composite volcanoes They are built of alternating layers of lava flows, volcanic ash, cinders, blocks, and bombs. http://www.windows.ucar.edu/tour/link=/earth/interior/volcanos_general.html
Earthquakes & Volcanoes Hot Spot Volcanoes Hot spots are areas in the earths mantle which, for unexplained reasons, are hotter than the surrounding mantle. The Hawaiian Islands are recent volcanoes produced by a hot spot that has given birth to countless volcanic islands, which over time have sunk into the sea to become atolls and seamounts. Hot spot volcanoes can show us how plates have moved in the past by leaving a trail of islands or atolls. This map of the Hawaiian_Emperor seamount chain shows us which way the plate was moving throughout history