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Mr. Burton 2.3 Notes. Please Grab: 1. Your folder. 2. Writing Utensil. 3. Answer the following question: How does the surface of the earth move?. Earth’s surface has many different landforms. Landforms , or shapes on the planet’s surface, make up the landscapes that surround us.
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Mr. Burton 2.3 Notes Please Grab:1. Your folder.2. Writing Utensil.3. Answer the following question: How does the surface of the earth move?
Earth’s surface has many different landforms • Landforms, or shapes on the planet’s surface, make up the landscapes that surround us. • Earth’s surface is covered with landforms of many different shapes and sizes. • Mountains, land that rises higher than 2,000 feet • Valleys, areas of low land located between mountains or hills • Plains, stretches of mostly flat land • Islands, areas of land completely surrounded by water • Peninsulas, land surrounded by water on three sides
Below the earth’s surface • The planet’s continents, or large landmasses, are part of Earth’s crust—the solid outer layer of the planet. • Theory of plate tectonics suggests that Earth’s surface is divided into a dozen or so slow-moving plates, or pieces of Earth’s crust. • The idea that continents have traveled great distances over millions of years is known as continental drift. • Theory, developed by Alfred Wegener, states that the continents were once united in a single supercontinent and over time, slowly separated and moved to their present positions. • As plates collide, separate, and slide, they shape Earth’s landforms
Collide, Separate, and Slide • Two ocean plates: one pushes under the other, creating ocean trenches, or deep valleys in ocean floor • Ocean and continental plate: ocean plate drops beneath continental plate, forcing land above to crumple and form mountain range • Two continental plates:land pushes up to form mountains • As plates move apart, gaps between plates allow magma to rise to Earth’s crust. • Lava, magma that reaches the Earth’s surface, emerges from the gap. • As lava cools, it builds a mid-ocean range, or underwater mountain, that can rise above the surface of the ocean to form islands. • As plates pass by each other, they sometimes grind together, producing earthquakes, sudden, violent movements of Earth’s crust. • Earthquakes often take place along faults, or breaks in Earth’s crust where movement occurs. • The region around the Pacific plate, called the Ring of Fire, is home to most of the world’s earthquakes and volcanoes.
Forces on the planet can alter the earth’s surface. • Weather, water, and other forces change Earth’s landforms by wearing them away or reshaping them. • Weathering is the process by which rock is broken down into smaller pieces called sediment. • Heating and cooling can cause rocks to crack. • Expansion of water as it freezes can cause cracks to expand. • Roots of trees can pry rocks apart. • Erosion is the movement of sediment from one location to another. • Can wear away or build up landforms
Different types of erosion: Wind, Glacial, and Water • Winds lift sediment into air and carry it across great distances . • On beaches and in deserts, deposits can form dunes. • Blowing sand can wear down rock. • Glaciers, or large, slow-moving sheets of ice, erode the land by carving valleys and mountain peaks. • Crush rock into sediment and move it great distances • Waves and flowing water can cut through rock, carry sediment, and deposit sediment in new locations. • Floodplains are created when rivers flood their banks and deposit sediment. • Sediment carried by a river all the way to the sea creates a delta.
Exit Slip: • What are the three types of erosion that we have?