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Chapter 2 The Physical World. Section 1 Planet Earth. Our Solar System. The sun and the objects that revolve around it including the Earth Sun’s mass creates gravity which keeps the objects revolving around it. Planets. Spherical objects orbiting the sun
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Our Solar System • The sun and the objects that revolve around it including the Earth • Sun’s mass creates gravity which keeps the objects revolving around it
Planets • Spherical objects orbiting the sun • Inner planets: Mercury, Venus, Earth & Mars • Outer planets: Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus & Neptune
Dwarf planets • Small round bodies that orbit the sun but have not cleared the area around their orbits of other orbiting bodies • Ex: Pluto & Ceres
2 types • Terrestrial planets – have solid, rocky crusts; Mercury, Venus, Earth & Mars • Gas giant planets – more gaseous & less dense; larger in diameter; Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, & Neptune
Asteroids • Small, irregularly shaped, planet-like objects found mainly between Mars and Jupiter in the asteroid belt
Comets • Icy dust particles & frozen gases • Orbits are inclined to Earth’s orbit from any direction
Meteoroids • Pieces of space debris (rock & iron) • Usually burn up when reach the Earth’s surface
Earth • Rounded object wider around the center than from top to bottom • Diameter = 7,930 miles at the Equator • Circumference = 24,900 miles
Earth’s surface • 70% water – hydrosphere: oceans, lakes, rivers & other bodies of water • 30% land – lithosphere: islands, continents & ocean basins
Other spheres • Atmosphere – layer of gases extending above the Earth’s surface; air we breathe; 78% nitrogen, 21% oxygen • Biosphere – part of Earth that supports life
Layers of Earth • Core – super-hot, solid inner layer of the planet surrounded by a band of melted iron & nickel (liquid outer core)
2. Mantle – thick layer of hot, dense rock consisting of silicon, aluminum, iron, magnesium, oxygen & other elements; continually rises, cools, sinks, warms up & rises again releasing 80% of generated heat
3. Crust – outer layer of the Earth’s surface; thin layer of rock (2-75 miles thick); broken into great slabs known as plates which float on a partially melted layer in the upper portion of the mantle & carry the oceans and continents
Pangaea • Supercontinent of Earth’s landmasses that broke apart into the smaller continents in existence today
Continental drift • Theory that continents were once joined and slowly drifted apart
Plate tectonics • The physical processes that create the earth’s physical features • May have created oceans & mountain ranges as well as the continents
Mountains • Created where giant continental plates collide (Himalaya Mtns) or when a sea plate collides with a continental plate through a process known as subduction (Andes Mtns)
Subduction • Process in which a heavier sea plate dives beneath the lighter continental plate and becomes molten material which then bursts through the crust to form volcanic mountains
Accretion • Pieces of the Earth’s crust come together slowly as the sea plate slides under the continental plate leveling off seamounts (underwater mountains) and piling up debris in trenches • Causes continents to expand
Folds • Bends in the layers of rock created as moving plates squeeze the Earth’s surface and it buckles
Faults • Cracks created in the Earth’s surface as plates grind or slide past each other • San Andreas Fault in California
Earthquakes • Sudden, violent movements of tectonic plates along a fault line • May change the surface of the land and the floor of the ocean
Ring of Fire • Zone of earthquake and volcanic activity around the perimeter of the Pacific Ocean
Volcanoes • Mountains formed by lava or by magma that breaks through the Earth’s crust often rising along plate boundaries where one plate plunges beneath another
Weathering • Chemical or physical processes, such as freezing, that break down rocks
Physical weathering • Occurs when large masses of rock are physically broken down into smaller pieces • Ex: water seeps into the cracks of a rock, freezes, expands and causes the rock to split
Chemical weathering • Changes the chemical makeup of rocks • Ex: rainwater containing carbon dioxide dissolving rocks such as limestone
Wind erosion • Involves the movement of dust, sand, and soil from one place to another
Glacial erosion • Large bodies of ice moving across the Earth’s surface picking up rocks and soil, changing the landscape
Moraines • Large piles of rock and debris left behind as glaciers melt and recede
2 types of glaciers • Sheet glaciers – flat, broad sheets of ice which advance a few feet each winter and recede in the summer (cover most of Greenland & Antarctica)
2. Mountain glaciers – located in high mountain valleys with a cold climate
Water erosion • Occurs when springwater and rainwater flow downhill, cutting the land and wearing away the soil and rock forming first gullies and then canyons
Soil • Product of weathering and biological activity • 5 factors: 1. Climate (wind, temperature, & rainfall) 2. Topography (shape & position of Earth’s physical features)
3. Geology (determining the original rock material influences depth, texture, drainage, & nutrient content) 4. Biology (living & dead plants and animals add organic matter) 5. Time (of other factors)
Water cycle • Regular movement of water on the Earth • Evaporation – changing of liquid water into vapor (gas) caused by the sun’s energy
Condensation – process of excess water vapor changing into liquid water when warm air cools • Precipitation – rain, snow or sleet which falls to the Earth when clouds gather more water than they can hold; sinks into the ground, collects in streams & lakes to return to the oceans
Oceans • 5 divisions of the water circling the Earth • Pacific, Atlantic, Indian, Arctic and Southern (extends from the coast of Antarctica north to 60º S latitude)
Desalination • Process of turning saltwater into freshwater
Freshwater • 3% of the Earth’s total water supply • Very little is actually available for human consumption
Groundwater • Freshwater that lies beneath the Earth’s surface and comes from rain and melted snow • Source for wells and springs
Aquifer • Underground porous rock layer saturated by very slow flows of water