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8th Grade Science

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8th Grade Science Unit 8: Changes Over Time Lesson 2: Changes in the Rocks Vocabulary of Instruction 1. Landform Landforms are natural features of the landscape. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: 8th Grade Science


1
8th Grade Science
  • Unit 8 Changes Over Time
  • Lesson 2 Changes in the Rocks
  • Vocabulary of Instruction

2
1. Landform
  • Landforms are natural features of the landscape.
  • They are natural physical features of the earth's
    surface.
  • Examples of Landforms are valleys, plateaus,
    mountains, plains, hills, loess, and glaciers.

3
1-A. Landform - Valley
  • A valley is a hollow or surface depression of the
    earth surrounded by hills or mountains.
  • It is a natural trough in the earth's surface,
    that slopes down to a stream, lake, or the ocean,
    formed by water and/or ice erosion.

4
1-B. Landform - Plateau
  • A plateau is a large highland area of fairly
    level land separated from surrounding land by
    steep slopes.
  • Some plateaus, like the plateau of Tibet, lie
    between mountain ranges. Others are higher than
    surrounding land.
  • Plateaus are widespread, and together with
    enclosed basins they cover about 45 percent of
    the Earth's land surface.

5
1-C. Landform - Mountains
  • Mountains are formed by volcanism, erosion, and
    disturbances or uplift in the earth's crust.
  • Most geologists believe that the majority of
    mountains are formed by geological forces such as
    heat and pressure producing changes and movements
    under the earth's crust.

6
1-D. Landform - Plains
  • Plains are broad, nearly level stretches of land
    that have no great changes in elevation.
  • Plains are generally lower than the land around
    them they may be found along a coast or inland.
  • Coastal plains generally rise from sea level
    until they meet higher landforms such as
    mountains or plateaus.
  • Inland plains may be found at high altitudes.

7
1-E. Landform - Hills
  • Hills are elevations of the earth's surface that
    have distinct summits, but are lower in elevation
    than mountains.
  • Hills may be formed by a buildup of rock debris
    or sand deposited by glaciers and wind.
  • Hills may be created by faults. Faults are a
    slight crack in the earth which can cause
    earthquakes.
  • Hills are formed when these faults go slightly
    upward.

8
1-F. Landform - Loess
  • Loess is a geologically recent deposit of silt or
    material which is usually yellowish or brown in
    color and consisting of tiny mineral particles
    brought by wind to the places where they now lie.
  • It is a product of past glacial activity in an
    area.
  • It is a sedimentary deposit of mineral particles
    which are finer than sand but coarser than dust
    or clay, deposited by the wind.
  • Loess is a type of silt which forms fertile
    topsoil in some parts of the world.
  • Loess deposits are usually a few meters thick.

9
1-G. Landform - Glacier
  • A glacier is a huge mass of ice that flows slowly
    over land.
  • They form in the cold polar regions and in high
    mountains.
  • The low temperatures in these places enable large
    amounts of snow to build up and turn into ice.
  • Most glaciers range in thickness from about 91 to
    3,000 meters.
  • Glaciers are formed when more snow falls during
    the winter than melts and evaporates in summer.

10
2. Contour Line (Isoline)
  • A contour line is a line on a map that connects
    points or places of equal elevation.
  • The bottom part of the diagram shows some contour
    lines with a straight line running through the
    location of the maximum value.
  • The curve at the top represents the values along
    that straight line.

11
3. Topographic Map (Contour Map)
  • Is a map that shows the change in elevation of
    the Earths surface using contour lines.
  • It shows shapes and features of the Earth surface
    such as roads, lakes, and cities.
  • Traditional definitions require a topographic map
    to show both natural and man-made features.

12
4. Rock Cycle
  • The Rock cycle describes the dynamic transitions
    through geologic time among the three main rock
    types sedimentary, metamorphic, and igneous.
  • As the diagram to the right illustrates, each
    type of rock is altered, changed, or destroyed
    when it is subject to factors such as heat,
    pressure, cooling, and erosion.

13
4-A. Rock Cycle - Diagram
  • The rock cycle starts at is the magma chamber.
    The magma comes out of the volcano and cools into
    igneous rocks.
  • Next, the igneous rocks erode and turn into
    sediments.
  • The sediments go through years of pressure and
    cementation which turns the sediments into
    sedimentary rock layers.
  • Once again the sedimentary rocks go through heat
    and pressure and turn into metamorphic rocks.
  • Then the new metamorphic rocks go through heat
    and turn into magma.

14
4-B. Rock Cycle Diagram Cont
  • Also, igneous rocks can go through heat and
    pressure and become metamorphic rocks.
  • Metamorphic and sedimentary rocks can become
    sediments.
  • That is how the rock cycle works.

15
4-C. Rock Cycle Diagram Cont
  • Another representation of the rock cycle
    processes is shown on the picture to the left.

16
4-D. Rock CycleThree Types of Rocks
  • 1. Igneous Rock
  • Lava flowing from a volcano in Hawaii forms
    igneous rocks.

17
4-D. Rock CycleThree Types of Rocks
  • 2. Metamorphic rock
  • In Arizona metamorphic rocks show formerly flat
    sedimentary layers squeezed into new shapes.

18
4-D. Rock CycleThree Types of Rocks
  • 3. Sedimentary Rock.
  • Metamorphic Rocks in Hawaii have been broken into
    sediments and have accumulated on this beach,
    where they might form a sedimentary rock through
    pressure and cementation.

19
4-D. Rock CycleThree Types of Rocks
  • Sedimentary and metamorphic rocks in Arizona were
    broken into sediments and carried away, leaving
    the Grand Canyon behind, one of the wonders of
    the world.

20
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