CRCT Information - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 44
About This Presentation
Title:

CRCT Information

Description:

A SLOW downhill movement of soil and regolith (The layer of loose rock resting on bedrock) ... Soufrie're Hills in Montserrat. Erupted in 1995 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:142
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 45
Provided by: Admi98
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: CRCT Information


1
CRCT Information
2
Erosion
  • Erosion is the process by which soil and
    weathered rock particles (sediment - gravel,
    sand, silt, and clay) are transported, or moved
    from one place to another.

3
The agents of erosion are
  • Running water
  • Wind
  • Ice (glaciers)
  • Waves
  • Gravity (mass wasting)

4
Creep
  • A SLOW downhill movement of soil and regolith
    (The layer of loose rock resting on bedrock).
    Creep results in tree trunks that are curved at
    the base, tilted utility poles, fence posts, and
    tombstones, and causes retaining walls to be
    broken or overturned.

5
Ice-covered Cirques,
  • Transantarctic Mountains, AntarcticaIce moves
    off the flat uplands into the cirques
    (bowl-shaped basins resulting from glacial
    erosion).

cirques
6
Plucking
  • occurs when glacial ice melts and the water
    flows down into cracks in rocks, refreezes, and
    fractures the rock into pieces.

7
Loess Deposits
  • Many farmlands of Midwestern United States are on
    fertile soil that developed from loess deposits.

8
  • Layers of fine sand and silt deposited by the
    wind form loess deposits. Windblown silt from the
    Pleistocene glaciations formed thick loess
    deposits in the central parts of the Mississippi
    River Valley. They form very fertile soils.

9
Sand Dunes
  • Forms when sediments are blown against an
    obstacle and settle behind it.

10
Alluvial Fan
  • Form when river waters empty from a mountain out
    onto a flat open plain.

11
The amount of runoff
  • Water that doesnt soak into the ground or
    evaporate.
  • Determined by
  • The amount of vegetation
  • The amount of rain
  • The slope of the land

12
Longshore Currents -
  • Carry sand down beaches to form features such as
    baymouth bars (Baymouth bar - A linear sand
    deposit that is continuous across the mouth of a
    bay) and spits.
  • Spit along California coast.

13
Mississippi River Drainage Basin
  • Is the largest drainage basin in the United
    States.

Currently active delta front of the Mississippi
River
14
Earthquakes
  • When the force on rock is great enough, they
    break, producing vibrations.

Blue primary waves followed by red secondary
waves move outward in concentric circles from th
e epicenter of an earthquake off British Columbi
a and Washington State.
15
Focus
  • The point in Earths interior where the energy
    release of an earthquake occurs is the focus.

16
Shear
  • The force that causes plates to move sideways
    past each other.
  • Occur at transform boundaries.
  • The fault is called a strike-slip fault.

17
Normal Faults
  • Caused by tensional forces.
  • Occur along divergent boundaries.

18
Reverse Fault
  • In a reverse fault, the block above the fault
    moves up relative to the block below the fault.
    This fault motion is caused by compressional
    forces and results in shortening.

19
View Different Types of Faults
20
Seismograph
  • Earthquakes generate seismic waves which can be
    detected with a sensitive instrument called a
    seismograph.

21
Richter scale
  • is a standard scale used to compare earthquakes.

22
It is a logarithmic scale
  • meaning that the numbers on the scale measure
    factors of 10. So, for example, an earthquake
    that measures 4.0 on the Richter scale is 10
    times larger than one that measures 3.0. On the
    Richter scale, anything below 2.0 is undetectable
    to a normal person and is called a microquake.

23
seismic waves.
  • Energy is released which has been building up
    over many years. This released energy travels
    through rocks in the form of vibrations called
    seismic waves.

24
Seismic Waves
  • Speed up when they reach the bottom of the crust.

25
Primary Waves (P-Waves)
  • The first waves to reach a seismograph after an
    earthquake.
  • They slow down when they hit the liquid outer
    core.

Primary waves are compression waves.
They push and pull the rocks of the earth's
surface.
26
Secondary Waves (S-Waves)
  • Secondary waves move through solid rock only.
    These shear waves move the earth's surface side
    to side.

27
Surface Waves
  • The most destructive seismic waves.

28
Love Waves (L-waves)
  • Love waves move along the surface of the earth
    and cause it to move up and down like something
    bobbing on the surface of the ocean.

29
Rayleigh Waves
  • A Rayleigh wave rolls along the ground just like
    a wave rolls across a lake or an ocean.
  • Most of the shaking felt from an earthquake is
    due to the Rayleigh wave.

30
Volcanoes
31
Three Ways Volcanoes Form
  • Subduction zones (Convergent Plate Boundaries)
  • Mid-ocean ridges (Divergent Plate Boundaries)
  • A hot spot. (Areas of Earths mantle and core
    which are believed to be hot)

32
Hot Spot
  • A hot spot occurs because of the intense heat of
    the outer core. This heat radiates through the
    mantle bringing hot solid rock upward to the hot
    spot. These areas of rising solid rock are called
    mantle plumes. Because of lower pressure in the
    upper region of the mantle the rock begins to
    melt. This forms magma which rises inch by inch
    until it reaches the surface forming a volcano.

More information
33
Composite Volcanoes
  • Composite volcanoes are constructed from multiple
    eruptions
  • Andesite magma, the most common but not the only
    magma type forming composite cones, produces lava
    more brittle than basaltic lava.
  • There are numerous composite volcano chains on
    earth, notably around the Pacific rim, known as
    the "Rim of Fire".

34
Composite Volcano
35
Dikes
  • Dikes are formed when magma enters a vertical
    crack between rock layers and hardens.

36
Batholith
  • A batholith is created when magma cools
    underground before reaching the surface.
  • Large body of igneous rock formed beneath the
    Earth's surface by the intrusion and
    solidification of magma.
  • Most of the rock in Yosemite National Park is
    exposed batholith.

37
Crater
  • The steep-walled depression around a volcanoes
    vent is a crater.

38
Caldera
  • If after an eruption, the tip of a volcano
    collapses down, a caldera is formed.
  • A caldera is a very large crater.

caldera
39
Islands
  • Some are formed when lava flows from rifts in the
    seafloor and builds up high enough to break the
    oceans surface.

40
Shield Volcano
  • Quiet eruptions of basaltic lava spread out in
    flat layers.
  • The Hawaiian Islands are examples of Shield
    Volcanoes.

41
Cinder Cone Volcano
  • Cinder cone volcanoes are the most common kind of
    volcanoes. They are steep sided cones of basaltic
    fragments and are smaller and simpler than
    composite volcanoes.
  • Explosive eruptions
  • Bits of rock or solidified lava dropped from the
    air are called tephra.
  • A great example of a cinder cone is Paricutin in
    Mexico.
  • More information

42
Water Vapor and Gases
  • Are a factor that determines whether a volcanic
    eruption will be quiet or explosive.

43
Mt. Kilauea in Hawaii
  • Basaltic Magma produces nonexplosive eruptions.
  • In 1990, lava from Kilauea covered most of a town
    in Hawaii.
  • Video View
  • Questions and Answers

44
Soufriere Hills in Montserrat
  • Erupted in 1995
  • Formed when ocean floor of the North American
    Plate and the South American Plate partially
    melted as it slid beneath the Caribbean Plate.
  • Resulted in
  • Ash
  • Heat
  • Acid Rain
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com