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Welcome to Earth Science!

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Welcome to Earth Science! * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * EXAMPLES of Scientific Laws: Law of Inertia Kepler s Laws of Planetary Motion Newton s Universal Law ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Welcome to Earth Science!


1
Welcome to Earth Science!
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Chapter 1 Introduction to Earth Science
  • BIG Idea Earth Scientists use specific methods
    to investigate Earth and beyond.

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What is Earth Science?
  • the study of the Earth and the universe around
    it
  • the study of Earth systems and systems in space
    including weather and climate systems, and the
    study of nonliving things such as rocks, oceans,
    and planets.

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A. The Scope of Earth Science
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1. Astronomy the study of objects beyond
Earths atmosphere.
  • The oldest branch of Earth Science.

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2. Meteorology the study of Earths atmosphere.
  • Weather Forecasters
  • Tornado Chasers

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3. Geology the study of the origin, history, and
structure of Earth.
The study of SOLID earth.
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4. Oceanography the study of the life and
properties of Earths oceans.
  • JACQUES COUSTEAU

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  • How much of our Earth is covered by water?

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  • almost three-fourths!

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  • Of that water, how much is salt water?

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  • about 97

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5. Environmental Science the study of the
interactions of organisms and their surroundings.
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B. Earths Systems
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  • Geosphere the area from the surface of Earth
    down to its center.
  • Three main parts
  • Crust
  • Mantle
  • Core
  • Inner core
  • Outer core

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  • Atmosphere the blanket of gases that surrounds
    our planet.

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  • Hydrosphere all the water on Earth.

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  • Biosphere all organisms on Earth and the
    environments in which they live.

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II. Methods of Scientists
  • Scientific Methods series of organized
    problem-solving procedures that help scientists
    conduct experiments.
  • There are five (5) steps to the SCIENTIFIC
    METHOD

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1. State the Problem, orAsk a Question?
  • Observation use of senses to gather information
    about the world.

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What is the difference between an OBSERVATION and
an INFERENCE?
  • Observation receiving knowledge of the outside
    world through our senses, or recording
    information using scientific tools and
    instruments.
  • Inference reasoning involved in drawing a
    conclusion or making a logical judgment on the
    basis of circumstantial evidence and prior
    conclusions rather than on the basis of direct
    observation.

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How will YOU remember the difference?
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2. Gather Information
  • To investigate a problem, one must gather
    information
  • Measurement comparing some aspect of an object
    with a standard unit.
  • meters, inches, miles grams, ounces,
    pounds

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3. Form a Hypothesis
  • Hypothesis a possible solution or answer to your
    problem or question MUST be testable!

Can be proven wrong.
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4. Test the Hypothesis
  • Experimentation procedure carried out to prove
    or disprove a hypothesis.

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  • (a) Independent Variable variable that you, the
    experimenter, changes (the manipulated variable)
  • (b) Dependent Variable variable that is affected
    by changes in the independent variable factor
    being measured (the responding variable)
  • (c) Constants things that never change during
    the experiment

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  • (d) Control duplicate setup of the experiment
    with everything the same except the variable you
    are testing.

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5. State a Conclusion
  • After many experiments and observations, the
    hypothesis is either proved or disproved

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  • Scientific Method Scenario
  •  
  • David read that Fox brake pads and Best brake
    pads were the best on the market. He always used
    NAPA pads and believed they performed the best.
    He decided to test all three pads and determine
    which was the best. David used the same car for
    each set of pads. He drove 25 mph and applied the
    brakes at the same point on the track. David then
    measured how many feet the car took to stop after
    the brakes were applied.
  •  
  • 1. The hypothesis _______________________________
    _____
  •  
  •  
  • 2. The effects of the ________________(independe
    nt variable)
  • on the __________________________________
    (dependent variable).
  •  
  •  
  • 3. List three constants
  • ______________________________________
  • ______________________________________
  • ______________________________________
  •  

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  • Scientific LAW
  • a statement of fact that is believed to be always
    true
  • STATES and describes behavior of natural
    phenomenon, does NOT explain them
  • a rule of nature
  • observable but not explainable

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EXAMPLES of Scientific Laws
  • Law of Inertia
  • Keplers Laws of Planetary Motion
  • Newtons Universal Law of Gravitation

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  • Scientific THEORY
  • an explanation based on many observations during
    repeated investigations
  • the best available explanation of a phenomenon
  • a hypothesis that is supported by the experiments
  • may change with the discovery of new data

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EXAMPLES of Scientific Theories
  • Heliocentric Theory
  • Theory of Evolution
  • Meteorite Impact Theory
  • Big Bang Theory

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  • "Scientific laws are the evidence used to support
    a conclusion.  Scientific theories are our best
    attempts at explaining the behavior of the world,
    in ways that can be tested by further
    experiment.  The facts (the scientific laws) must
    convince us that our theory is a good explanation
    for what happened."

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Meteorite Impact Theory
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  • Explains the extinction of the dinosaurs

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  • Meteorite hit the earth 65 million years ago
  • The impact created so much dust it blocked out
    the sun
  • No sun, no plantsalmost everything died

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  • Proof
  • Computer models
  • Deformed quartz
  • Iridium around the impact site

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III. Communication in Science
  • lab reports
  • graphs
  • models

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