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Chapter 1 - The Earth

Geologic Time Scale

  • Earth’s past eras have been separated by major events:

    • Key Principles of the geologic time scale:

      • Strata (Rock layers) are laid down in succession representing a slice of time.

      • Principle of Superposition: Any given layer is older than the layers above them and younger than the layers below them.

  • Complications to the Geologic Time Scale

    • Layers are eroded, distorted, tilted, or inverted after deposition

    • Layers in different areas laid down at the same time can look different

    • A layer from one area only tells a part of Earth’s history

Earth’s Structure

  • Earth can be divided into 3 sections:

    • The Biosphere

      • Includes all forms of life both on land and sea.

    • The Hydrosphere

      • Includes all forms of water.

    • The Internal Structure

      • Divided into the crust, mantle, and core.

  • The Layers of the Earth

    • The Crust

      • Makes up 0.5% of Earth’s total mass.

      • Subdivided into the continental crust and the oceanic crust.

      • The crust is rocky and brittle.

    • Continental Crust

      • Extends down 20-30 miles.

      • Continental Crust is stratified (layered) and becomes more dense with depth.

      • Largely composed of sedimentary, volcanic, and granite-like rocks

      • Older areas contain metamorphic rocks.

    • Oceanic Crust

      • Relatively thin part of the crust.

      • Consists of Basaltic Rock overlain with sediments.

      • Younger and contains different chemical composition

    • Mantle

      • Most of Earth’s mass is in the mantle.

      • Composed of iron, magnesium, aluminum, and silicon-oxygen compounds.

      • Most of the mantle is solid.

      • The asthenosphere (upper third) is more plastic-like.

    • Lithosphere

      • It is broken up into huge sections called tectonic plates.

      • The movement of the lithosphere causes a lot of Earth’s events.

    • Core

      • Mostly composed of iron.

      • Outer core is molten.

      • Inner core is solid.

Plate Tectonics

  • Plate Tectonic Theory

    • Earth’s lithosphere is divided into huge sections called tectonic plates that drift over the mantle

    • Arose from the concept of seafloor spreading and continental drift.

  • Continental Drift Theory

    • Alfred Wegener proposed that all continents used to be one single landmass.

    • Wegener believed that the supercontinent started breaking apart 200 million years ago.

  • Seafloor Spreading Theory

    • Alternating magnetic patterns were found in rocks found on the seafloor.

    • Similar patterns were found on the other sides of mid-ocean ridges and in the center of ridges.

    • Suggested that new crust was made at volcanic rifts zones.

    • Subduction Zones are where two tectonic plates meet together and one plate slides under the other and moves toward the mantle.

  • Types of Boundaries - Convergent, Divergent, Transform

    • Transform Boundaries

      • Occur when plates slide past each other.

      • They frequently cause earthquakes because of friction and the stress buildup between them.

    • Divergent Boundaries

      • Occur when two plates slide apart from each other.

      • The space created between the two plates will fill up with molten magma.

      • Can create massive fault zones in the oceanic ridge system and are areas of frequent oceanic earthquakes.

    • Convergent Boundaries

      • Occurs when two plates slide together

      • Commonly forms subduction zones or an orogenic belt.

      • When a dense oceanic plate subduct a less-dense continental plate, an oceanic trench can form, and a mountain range on the continental side.

      • When two oceanic plates converge, they create an island arc - a chain of volcanic islands rising from the seafloor.

      • When two continental plates collide, mountain ranges are created because of the crust being compressed and pushed upward.

Earthquakes

  • Earthquakes

    • They occur during abrupt movement on a fault, tectonic plate boundaries, or along mid-ocean ridges.

    • A massive store of energy is released in a short period of time when plates slide past each other.

  • Focus: The place where all the energy is released.

  • Richter Scale

    • The strength of an earthquake is measured using the Richter scale.

    • It compares the amplitudes of waves instead of the strength of the earthquakes.

  • Body and Surface Waves

    • Body Waves

      • Body waves travel through Earth’s interior. There are two types - P waves and S waves.

        • P waves travel throughout Earth and are caused by the expansion and contraction of bedrock.

        • S waves are produced when a material moves either vertically or horizontally.

      • Surface waves produce rolling and/or swaying motions. They are slower than P and S waves. These waves cause damage and ground motion.

Tsunamis

  • Tsunamis

    • Series of waves created when a body of water is rapidly displaced, usually from an earthquake.

    • They can be generated when plate boundaries move and displace the water vertically.

Volcanoes

  • Volcanoes

    • Divided into 4 categories - active, inactive, dormant, extinct.

    • Active volcanoes produce magma at the surface.

    • Majority of active volcanoes produce magma at subduction zones or mid-ocean ridges.

    • Active volcanoes produce ejecta (lava rock/ash), molten lava, and gases such as sulfur dioxide.

  • Volcanic Eruptions

    • Eruptions occur whenever pressure inside a magma chamber forces molten magma up to the top of the volcano to erupt.

    • Benefits of volcanic eruptions include producing land, and increased soil production from the erosion of lava rock.

Solar Intensity, Seasons, and Longitude/Latitude

  • Solar Intensity

    • Factors that affect the amount of solar energy at the surface of the Earth include Earth’s rotation, the tilt of Earth’s axis, and atmospheric conditions.

  • Seasons

    • Seasons are not caused by the distance away from the sun, but from the angle of sunlight hitting Earth.

  • Latitude/Longitude

    • Longitude is East/West positions on Earth. 0 degrees longitude begins in the Prime Meridian. The degrees continue 180 degrees east/west to meet at the International Date Line.

    • Latitude is North/South positions. 0 degrees is the equator. 90 degrees north is the North Pole. 90 degrees south is the South Pole.

Soil

  • Soil

    • Soil is the thin layer on the top of Earth’s surface. It affects every part of the ecosystem.

    • Soil is composed of minerals of different sizes, organic materials from the remains of dead organisms and plants, and open space that can be filled with air and water.

  • Soils develop due to different factors

    • Parent Material - Rock and material from where the soil derives

    • Climate - Precipitation and Temperature

    • Living Organisms - bacteria, fungi, worms, snails, insects that help decompose

    • Topography - the characteristics of where the soil is located

  • Humus

    • Dark material formed when plant and animal matter decays.

    • Earthworms often help mix humus with minerals in the soil.

    • This allows air and water to go through the soil

  • Soil Quality

    • Aeration - How well the soil can absorb nutrients, water, and oxygen.

    • Degree of soil compaction - How compact the soil is.

    • Nutrient - Holding Capacity - How well the soil can contain and hold nutrients

    • Permeability - The capacity that can allow water and oxygen to pass through it

    • pH - How acidic or basic a soil is.

    • Pore Size - The space between soil particles.

    • Size of soil particle - Determines the amount of water and nutrients that the soil can hold

    • Water - Holding Capacity - Controlled primarily by the soil texture.

  • Soil Food Web

    • Community of organisms living their whole lives or part of their lives in the soil. Describes the complexity of the living system in the soil.

  • Soil Erosion

    • The movement of weathered rock or soil components from one area to the other.

    • Caused by human activities, flowing water, wind.

    • Causes damage to the soil, agriculture, canals, and dams.

  • Landslides and Mudslides

    • Occurs when masses of rock, earth, or debris moves down a slope.

    • Mudslides tend to flow in channels.

    • Landslides are caused by disturbances in the natural stability of a slope.

    • Mudslides occur when water rapidly collects in the ground and causes in a surge of water-filled rocks.

The Rock Cycle

  • Igneous Rocks

    • Formed by cooling

    • Broken down by weathering and water transport.

    • Most soil comes from Igneous Rocks

  • Metamorphic Rocks

    • Formed by intense heat and pressure.

    • High Quartz content forms sandy soil.

    • Slate forms silty soil.

    • Marble forms limestone clay.

  • Sedimentary Rocks

    • Formed by piling and cementing various materials over time. Fossils form in sedimentary rocks.

JP

Chapter 1 - The Earth

Geologic Time Scale

  • Earth’s past eras have been separated by major events:

    • Key Principles of the geologic time scale:

      • Strata (Rock layers) are laid down in succession representing a slice of time.

      • Principle of Superposition: Any given layer is older than the layers above them and younger than the layers below them.

  • Complications to the Geologic Time Scale

    • Layers are eroded, distorted, tilted, or inverted after deposition

    • Layers in different areas laid down at the same time can look different

    • A layer from one area only tells a part of Earth’s history

Earth’s Structure

  • Earth can be divided into 3 sections:

    • The Biosphere

      • Includes all forms of life both on land and sea.

    • The Hydrosphere

      • Includes all forms of water.

    • The Internal Structure

      • Divided into the crust, mantle, and core.

  • The Layers of the Earth

    • The Crust

      • Makes up 0.5% of Earth’s total mass.

      • Subdivided into the continental crust and the oceanic crust.

      • The crust is rocky and brittle.

    • Continental Crust

      • Extends down 20-30 miles.

      • Continental Crust is stratified (layered) and becomes more dense with depth.

      • Largely composed of sedimentary, volcanic, and granite-like rocks

      • Older areas contain metamorphic rocks.

    • Oceanic Crust

      • Relatively thin part of the crust.

      • Consists of Basaltic Rock overlain with sediments.

      • Younger and contains different chemical composition

    • Mantle

      • Most of Earth’s mass is in the mantle.

      • Composed of iron, magnesium, aluminum, and silicon-oxygen compounds.

      • Most of the mantle is solid.

      • The asthenosphere (upper third) is more plastic-like.

    • Lithosphere

      • It is broken up into huge sections called tectonic plates.

      • The movement of the lithosphere causes a lot of Earth’s events.

    • Core

      • Mostly composed of iron.

      • Outer core is molten.

      • Inner core is solid.

Plate Tectonics

  • Plate Tectonic Theory

    • Earth’s lithosphere is divided into huge sections called tectonic plates that drift over the mantle

    • Arose from the concept of seafloor spreading and continental drift.

  • Continental Drift Theory

    • Alfred Wegener proposed that all continents used to be one single landmass.

    • Wegener believed that the supercontinent started breaking apart 200 million years ago.

  • Seafloor Spreading Theory

    • Alternating magnetic patterns were found in rocks found on the seafloor.

    • Similar patterns were found on the other sides of mid-ocean ridges and in the center of ridges.

    • Suggested that new crust was made at volcanic rifts zones.

    • Subduction Zones are where two tectonic plates meet together and one plate slides under the other and moves toward the mantle.

  • Types of Boundaries - Convergent, Divergent, Transform

    • Transform Boundaries

      • Occur when plates slide past each other.

      • They frequently cause earthquakes because of friction and the stress buildup between them.

    • Divergent Boundaries

      • Occur when two plates slide apart from each other.

      • The space created between the two plates will fill up with molten magma.

      • Can create massive fault zones in the oceanic ridge system and are areas of frequent oceanic earthquakes.

    • Convergent Boundaries

      • Occurs when two plates slide together

      • Commonly forms subduction zones or an orogenic belt.

      • When a dense oceanic plate subduct a less-dense continental plate, an oceanic trench can form, and a mountain range on the continental side.

      • When two oceanic plates converge, they create an island arc - a chain of volcanic islands rising from the seafloor.

      • When two continental plates collide, mountain ranges are created because of the crust being compressed and pushed upward.

Earthquakes

  • Earthquakes

    • They occur during abrupt movement on a fault, tectonic plate boundaries, or along mid-ocean ridges.

    • A massive store of energy is released in a short period of time when plates slide past each other.

  • Focus: The place where all the energy is released.

  • Richter Scale

    • The strength of an earthquake is measured using the Richter scale.

    • It compares the amplitudes of waves instead of the strength of the earthquakes.

  • Body and Surface Waves

    • Body Waves

      • Body waves travel through Earth’s interior. There are two types - P waves and S waves.

        • P waves travel throughout Earth and are caused by the expansion and contraction of bedrock.

        • S waves are produced when a material moves either vertically or horizontally.

      • Surface waves produce rolling and/or swaying motions. They are slower than P and S waves. These waves cause damage and ground motion.

Tsunamis

  • Tsunamis

    • Series of waves created when a body of water is rapidly displaced, usually from an earthquake.

    • They can be generated when plate boundaries move and displace the water vertically.

Volcanoes

  • Volcanoes

    • Divided into 4 categories - active, inactive, dormant, extinct.

    • Active volcanoes produce magma at the surface.

    • Majority of active volcanoes produce magma at subduction zones or mid-ocean ridges.

    • Active volcanoes produce ejecta (lava rock/ash), molten lava, and gases such as sulfur dioxide.

  • Volcanic Eruptions

    • Eruptions occur whenever pressure inside a magma chamber forces molten magma up to the top of the volcano to erupt.

    • Benefits of volcanic eruptions include producing land, and increased soil production from the erosion of lava rock.

Solar Intensity, Seasons, and Longitude/Latitude

  • Solar Intensity

    • Factors that affect the amount of solar energy at the surface of the Earth include Earth’s rotation, the tilt of Earth’s axis, and atmospheric conditions.

  • Seasons

    • Seasons are not caused by the distance away from the sun, but from the angle of sunlight hitting Earth.

  • Latitude/Longitude

    • Longitude is East/West positions on Earth. 0 degrees longitude begins in the Prime Meridian. The degrees continue 180 degrees east/west to meet at the International Date Line.

    • Latitude is North/South positions. 0 degrees is the equator. 90 degrees north is the North Pole. 90 degrees south is the South Pole.

Soil

  • Soil

    • Soil is the thin layer on the top of Earth’s surface. It affects every part of the ecosystem.

    • Soil is composed of minerals of different sizes, organic materials from the remains of dead organisms and plants, and open space that can be filled with air and water.

  • Soils develop due to different factors

    • Parent Material - Rock and material from where the soil derives

    • Climate - Precipitation and Temperature

    • Living Organisms - bacteria, fungi, worms, snails, insects that help decompose

    • Topography - the characteristics of where the soil is located

  • Humus

    • Dark material formed when plant and animal matter decays.

    • Earthworms often help mix humus with minerals in the soil.

    • This allows air and water to go through the soil

  • Soil Quality

    • Aeration - How well the soil can absorb nutrients, water, and oxygen.

    • Degree of soil compaction - How compact the soil is.

    • Nutrient - Holding Capacity - How well the soil can contain and hold nutrients

    • Permeability - The capacity that can allow water and oxygen to pass through it

    • pH - How acidic or basic a soil is.

    • Pore Size - The space between soil particles.

    • Size of soil particle - Determines the amount of water and nutrients that the soil can hold

    • Water - Holding Capacity - Controlled primarily by the soil texture.

  • Soil Food Web

    • Community of organisms living their whole lives or part of their lives in the soil. Describes the complexity of the living system in the soil.

  • Soil Erosion

    • The movement of weathered rock or soil components from one area to the other.

    • Caused by human activities, flowing water, wind.

    • Causes damage to the soil, agriculture, canals, and dams.

  • Landslides and Mudslides

    • Occurs when masses of rock, earth, or debris moves down a slope.

    • Mudslides tend to flow in channels.

    • Landslides are caused by disturbances in the natural stability of a slope.

    • Mudslides occur when water rapidly collects in the ground and causes in a surge of water-filled rocks.

The Rock Cycle

  • Igneous Rocks

    • Formed by cooling

    • Broken down by weathering and water transport.

    • Most soil comes from Igneous Rocks

  • Metamorphic Rocks

    • Formed by intense heat and pressure.

    • High Quartz content forms sandy soil.

    • Slate forms silty soil.

    • Marble forms limestone clay.

  • Sedimentary Rocks

    • Formed by piling and cementing various materials over time. Fossils form in sedimentary rocks.