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True or False: The Earth

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True or False: The Earth s surface has stayed the same for thousands of years – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: True or False: The Earth


1
True or False The Earths surface has stayed the
same for thousands of years
2
True or False The Earths surface has stayed the
same for thousands of years
False
The Earths surface is always changing!
3
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4
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5
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6
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7
Weathering and Erosion
Wind Water Ice Gravity
8
Weathering
  • The breakdown of the materials of Earths crust
    into smaller pieces.

Weathering causes soil formation
9
Water causes weathering
What evidence of weathering do you see in this
picture?
10
Wind causes weathering
Why wasnt this mass of land weathered away?
What evidence of weathering do you see in this
picture?
11
Ice causes weathering
Describe how ice causes weathering?
12
Erosion
  • The process by which water, ice, wind or gravity
    moves fragments of rock and soil.

What evidence of erosion do you see in this
picture?
13
Erosion is Movement of Sediment!
  • This process, known as Erosion, is gradually
    wearing down the surface of the earth.
  • Erosion is the process by which weathered rock
    and soil (sediment) are moved  from one place to
    another.
  • Erosion carves the Earth's surface creating
    canyons, gorges, and even beaches.

What do you think has caused this rock to look
this way?
14
Wind Erosion
  • As the wind blows it picks up small particles of
    sand/sediment and blasts large rocks with the
    abrasive particles, cutting and shaping the rock.
  • The intensity of wind erosion is determined by
  • Sum (amount)
  • Speed
  • Slope
  • Surface

15
Wind Erosion
Creates sand dunes
Greatest impact in deserts
Removes fertile topsoil
16
Water Causes Erosion
  • runoff, rivers and, streams

Creates MOST of the changes in the Earth's
landscape!
17
Water causes Erosion
  • When rain falls to the Earth it can evaporate,
    sink into the ground, or flow over the land as
    Runoff.
  • When it flows over land, erosion occurs.
  • Runoff picks up pieces of rock and "runs"
    downhill cutting tiny grooves (called rills) into
    the land.

Rivers and streams are a constant flow of
runoff- they constantly weather and erode!
18
Water causes Erosion
  • How much erosion takes place is determined by
    the
  • Sum (amount)
  • Slope
  • Speed
  • Surface

Can you act increasing and decreasing the four
Ss?
19
Ice Causes Erosion
Glaciers wear down the landscape by picking up
and carrying debris that moves across the land
along with the ice.
20
Ice Causes Erosion
  • Glaciers can pick up and carry sediment that
    ranges in size from sand grains to boulders
    bigger than houses.

Moving like a conveyor belt and a bulldozer, a
single glacier can move millions of tons of
material!
21
Ice Causes Erosion
  • How much erosion takes place is determined by
    the
  • Sum (Glaciers are massive!)
  • Slope
  • Speed
  • Surface

22
Gravity causes erosion
  • Creep, Slump, Landslides, Mudslides, and
    Avalanches.

Slower
Faster
These are examples of mass movement (or called
mass wasting)
landslide clip.mpeg
23
Gravity causes Erosion
  • How much erosion takes place is determined by
    the
  • Sum
  • Slope
  • Speed
  • Surface

24
Plants CAN CAUSE weathering
25
Plants CAN PREVENT erosion
26
Deposition
  • Rock particles that are picked up and transported
    during erosion will ultimately be deposited
    somewhere else
  • Deposition is the process by which sediments
    (small particles of rock) are laid down in new
    locations.
  • Together, Erosion and Deposition build new
    landforms.
  • Deltas
  • Canyons
  • Meanders
  • Floodplains

27
Delta
  • Where rivers meet the ocean is called the mouth
    of the river. Soil and dirt carried by these
    rivers is deposited at the mouth, and new land is
    formed. The new, soil-rich land is known as a
    Delta

28
Canyons
This simple animation provides you with a
visualization of how the Colorado River has
"downcut" into the rock layers of the Grand
Canyon. How long it took to carve the Grand
Canyon is debated bygeologists. Some estimates
are between 6 and 8million years, which is very
recent by comparison.
Canyons are large valleys created by a river or
stream.
29
Meanders
Meandering streams wander side to side as they
constantly seek out the lowest elevation. This
constant motion creates a series of S-shaped
loops.
30
Meanders
Stream Velocity varies from one side to the other
side of the S, resulting in erosion in some
places and deposition of sediments in others.
31
Floodplains
  • Floodplains form along the banks of mid-order
    streams and larger rivers.
  • These are low-lying areas along the sides of a
    river channel that have regular times of heavy
    waterflow to cause the river to spill over and
    flood the land.
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