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Constructive and Destructive Forces

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Title: Constructive and Destructive Forces


1
Constructive and Destructive Forces
2
Layers of the Earth
3
Constructive ForcesIdentify surface features
caused by destructive forces.
  • Construct means to build up.
  • Forces that build up features on the surface of
    the Earth.
  • Sediment (Deltas, sand dunes, etc.)
  • Volcanoes (makes Islands)
  • Tectonic Plates (Mountains)
  • Crust deformation (Folding or Faulting)

4
Sediment
  • The process of sediment being carried causes new
    landforms.
  • Wind sand transported by the wind creates sand
    dunes.
  • Water bits of soil and rock can be carried
    downstream and deposited causing deltas.
  • Ice glaciers pick up and move rock and other
    materials, depositing it elsewhere.

5
Wind DepositionSand Dune Cumberland Island, GA
6
Water Deposition Sediment is carried by river
7
Glacial Deposition
8
Volcano
  • http//app.discoveryeducation.com/search?Nttvolca
    noerupt
  • United Streaming-Fire Down Below

9
Volcanoes
  • A volcano is an opening in the Earth's surface or
    crust, which allows hot, molten rock, ash and
    gases to escape from deep below the surface.
  • Volcanic activity involving the extrusion of rock
    tends to form mountains or features like
    mountains over a period of time.
  • Magma (inside)
  • Lava (outside)

10
Volcanoes
  • There are two main types of volcanoes shield and
    composite.
  • Shield volcanoes are usually found in the middle
    of tectonic plates. Islands like Hawaii are good
    examples of this type of volcano. These are
    making new islands every yeartakes a long time.
    (Hawaiian Islands)
  • There's a hole in the middle of the plate and
    magma moves out and piles on top of itself,
    slowly building a mountain of rock. (Katmai)

11
Volcanoes
  • 1. Magma reservoir2. Country rock3. Conduit
    (pipe)4. Base5. Sill6. Branch pipe7. Layers
    of ash emitted by the volcano8. Flank9. Layers
    of lava emitted by the volcano10. Throat11.
    Parasitic cone12. Lava flow13. Vent14.
    Crater15. Ash cloud

12
HOT SPOT
  • http//app.discoveryeducation.com/search?Ntthotsp
    ot
  • United Streaming-Hot Spot

13
Tectonic Plates
  • Mountains can be formed because of moving
    tectonic plates.

14
Tectonic Plates
15
Faults
  • Faults are cracks in the Earths crust.
  • The surface of the Earth is made up of tectonic
    plates that are floating on magma (molten rock).
  • It is along these fault lines that earthquakes
    and volcanoes occur.

16
Destructive ForcesIdentify examples of surface
features caused by destructive processes.
  • Destruct means to destroy.
  • Forces that destroy features on the Earths
    surface.
  • Erosion (water - rivers and oceans, wind)
  • Weathering (chemical or mechanical)
  • Impact of organisms
  • Earthquake

17
Earthquakes
  • An earthquake is a phenomenon that results from
    the sudden release of stored energy in the
    Earths crust.
  • It is caused by a strain on the fault lines of
    the Earths crust. When the energy of the strain
    is released, similar to a rubber band snapping,
    the earthquake occurs.
  • At the Earth's surface, earthquakes cause a
    shaking or displacement of the ground and
    sometimes cause the ground to break apart and
    change shape. Earthquake Animation!

18
Earthquake
19
Weathering and Erosion
  • Weathering is the breakdown of the continents and
    the land around you. The breaking down of these
    rocks and land due to forces such as wind and
    water is weathering. When it rains, rocks are
    washed down a mountain or down a stream. Soils
    are washed away. The ocean beats against a cliff
    and breaks it apart. If it is moved elsewhere it
    is called erosion.

20
Mechanical Weathering
  • Mechanical weathering is the process of breaking
    big rocks into little ones. This process usually
    happens near the surface of the planet.
    Temperature also affects the land. The cool
    nights and hot days always cause things to expand
    and contract. That movement can cause rocks to
    crack and break apart. Roots and plants also push
    into the rocks and break them apart. They act
    like wedges and push the rocks apart. Little
    animals also help by burrowing and digging
    through the ground.

21
Chemical Weathering
  • Chemical weathering includes the effect of
    weathering on molecules and atoms. As with all
    chemistry, the greater the surface area of an
    object, the more chemical reactions can take
    place. For these chemical reactions to happen in
    nature, moisture, and heat must be present.

22
Biological Weathering(Impact of Organisms)
  • Biological weathering would include the effect of
    animals and plants on the landscape. This is more
    than roots digging in and wedging rocks.
    Biological weathering is the actual molecular
    breakdown of minerals.

23
Earthquakes
  • More than buildings collapse when an earthquake
    hits. The land itself is totally changed. You can
    see scars across the landscape. Those scars
    appear when one block of land has moved compared
    to another. Roads often change their placement.
    They either become uneven or just crack. Streams
    can also change course. Sometimes rocks can fall
    and block the stream. Other times, the land is
    even lowered in certain areas. When it's lower,
    it's easier for the water to flow in the new
    direction .

24
Earthquakes
  • San Andreas Fault line is 810 miles and runs
    along California. It separates the tectonic
    boundary of the Pacific and North America
    boundary.

25
Technology andHuman Interventions
  • Humans try to CONTROL these forces.
  • seismological studies
  • flood control (dams, levees, storm drain
    management, etc.)
  • beach reclamation (Georgia coastal islands)

26
Seismic Waves
  • Scientists study earthquakes so that they can
    understand how they work and so that they can try
    to predict future quakes.
  • Earthquakes are recorded by instruments called
    seismographs.
  • A short wiggly line means a small earthquake and
    a large one means a large earthquake.

27
Seismic Waves
  • These are waves of energy that travel through
    Earths layers studied by geologist.
  • Primary (P waves) travel fast
  • Secondary waves (S waves) travel through solids

28
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29
Flood Control
  • The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers began
    constructing dams in Georgia for navigation and
    flood control in the 1940s and 1950s under the
    Flood Control Act of 1944 and the Watershed
    Protection and Flood Prevention Act of 1954.

Lake Allatoona was created in 1950 by the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers for flood control. At
more than 12,000 acres, Allatoona is one of the
larger lakes in the state.
30
Flood Control Methods
  • Dams control the water flow in a stream or river.
  • A levee is an embankment designed to prevent the
    flooding of a river.
  • Storm drains are for carrying off rainfall
    drained from paved surfaces, roofs, etc.

31
Beach Reclamation
  • Weather, waves and wind cause the coastline to
    wash away.
  • Keeping sand dunes intact helps to keep the
    beaches from eroding.

32
Stone Mountainformed by plate tectonics
33
Emerson fault
34
Gorge
35
Providence Canyon, GA
36
Appalachian Mountains
37
Sand Mountain
38
Lime sinks-chemical dissolution of rocks
39
Pine MountainChain Rock and KY first state park
40
Cumberland FallsOnly Falls with Moonbow
41
Beaches
42
Brasstown Baldhighest natural point in GA
43
Brevard Fault Zone
44
Cumberland Plateau
45
Lookout Mountainlast battle of Cherokees
46
Blue Ridge Mountains
47
Mississippi Riverlargest drain in USA
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