layers of the earth

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Everybody Read to Find Out: • How the layers of the earth are ordered and what the names of the layers are

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layers of the earth

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Page 1: layers of the earth

Everybody Read to Find Out:

• How the layers of the earth are ordered and what the names of the layers are

Page 2: layers of the earth

1. The center of the earth consists of hot rock and is called the inner core (solid iron and nickel).

2. There is also an outer core (liquid iron and nickel).

3. The next level is hot, molten rock called mantle.

4. The layer that we walk on is the crust.

Page 3: layers of the earth
Page 4: layers of the earth

1. The Crust1. The earth’s outer layer of

rock2.5-20 MILES THICK!!3.Has mountains, ocean floor,

volcanoes, and continents

Page 5: layers of the earth

2. The Mantle1. The second layer between the

crust and outer core2. Is solid rock except for the part

next to the crust, where there is thick liquid

3. 1,800 MILES THICK!!

Page 6: layers of the earth

3. The Outer Core1. The outer part of the core is

liquid and HOT!2. It gets hotter the deeper you go

(around 9,000 degrees F in the center—your oven only goes to about 600 degrees F).

3. It’s so hot that rock melts. Melted rock is called MAGMA.

4. 1,400 MILES THICK!

Page 7: layers of the earth

4. The Inner Core1. 800 MILES TO CENTER!2. Shaped like a ball, or sphere.3. Solid

Page 8: layers of the earth

Everybody read to find out:

1. What makes the earth’s crust move

2. The definition of plate tectonics3. What forces act on Earth’s

crust(P. C-18-C-21)

Page 9: layers of the earth

The inside of the earth is very hot, and it always releases a lot of energy.

This energy causes things to move in the earth (rocks, plates, etc.)

The earth has many different landforms. They include mountains, hills, rivers, canyons, plateaus, and many other things.

CauseEffects

Page 10: layers of the earth

Plate Tectonics1. Plate Tectonics

a. Explains how plates (large bodies of rock) move slowly around the earth on partly melted rock

2. Platesa. A large section of the earth’s

crust that moves as one unitb. There are 8 large plates and

several smaller plates.

Page 11: layers of the earth

Plate TectonicsAs these plates float, they move in three

different ways. Each way that they move has a special name associated with the boundary where two plates meet.

Fault -- the place where two plates meet.Types of plate movement:

1. Convergent -- where two plates move together

2. Divergent – where two plates are drifting apart.

3. Sliding – where the plates slide past one another.

Page 12: layers of the earth

Already knew

New Info Wow!

Wonder?

•Layers of Earth•There are 7 continents.•Earth’s plates move in 3 ways (convergent, divergent, & sliding).•Plate Tectonics Theory says that Earth is made up of plates.

•Alfred Wegener thought up the Continental Drift Theory.•The CD Theory is that the continents move together and then away from each other.•Also, he thought the continents were all joined once.

•Wegener named the huge continent Pangaea.•The Mid-Atlantic Ridge is a HUGE mountain range on the ocean floor (10,000 feet).

•It is crazy to think that plants moved with the land mass.•Will we ever see big changes in Earth?

Page 13: layers of the earth

Volcanoes1. What are they?

a. An opening in the earth’s surface.2. How do they form?

a. Magma (melted rock) from the mantle sometimes pushes upward.b. The crust usually blocks it, but sometimes it seeps through cracks in the crust. When it builds up inside a “magma chamber”, the pressure starts to increase and then---BAM!!!

Page 14: layers of the earth

3. What happens after they erupt?a. The magma explodes through a main vent in the volcano.b. A deep hole called a crater is often left on top of the volcano.c. The erupting magma is called lava.d. Gases, volcanic bombs, ash, and melted rock also burst from inside the volcano.e. The lava layers and ash layers build up around the outside of the volcano.

4. Interesting Facts:a. Hawaii was formed by volcanoeserupting in the Pacific Ocean.b. The two types of volcanoes are erupting and oozing.c. Lava can flow up to 50 mph but usually just flows 10 mph.

Page 15: layers of the earth

Connecting Learning1. Do you think Pangaea once existed?

Why or why not?2. Use the diagram on p. 21. In which

direction does each of the continents seem to be moving? How might Earth look several million years from now?

3. Look at the map of the earthquakes and volcanoes and Earth’s plates (p. 22). What do you notice?

4. What are you wondering now?

Page 16: layers of the earth

Earthquakes1. What causes earthquakes?

a. Sudden shifts in the earth’s rock layers cause earthquakes

2. The focus, or epicenter, is where the earthquake begins.

3. During an earthquake, the plates might:a. Meet in a rubbing way (shoulder to

shoulder)--slidingb. Spread away from each other

(divergent)c. Meet in a pushing way (subduction)--

convergent

Page 17: layers of the earth

4. New plates can be created during an earthquake (especially at mid-ocean ridges).

5. A seismograph is used to measure earthquakes.

a. The Richter scale is used to give them a number.

b. People cannot feel earthquakes between a 1-2 on the scale.

c. An earthquake that receives a 7-8 destroys buildings.

6. Earthquakesa. Shake and destroy land, homes,

and buildingsb. Create land by creating

mountains and valleys

Page 18: layers of the earth

3 Different Types of RocksScientists classify rocks in 3 main groups

based on how they were formed.1. Igneous Rocks (Fact: Igneous means “fiery”)

a. How they form: When magma reaches the surface, it becomes lava .b. This hot, molten rock cools and

hardens to form igneous rock.c. Characteristics: Igneous rocks

vary in size, shape, color, and texture. Examples: basalt, pumice, obsidian

Page 19: layers of the earth

2. Sedimentary Rocksa. Form in water from “sediment”, which is grains and bits of rock that were created by erosion or weathering.b. Fact: The sediment builds up over many years and becomes cemented together to form sedimentary rock.c. Characteristics: These rocks are layered. The layers tell the story about how the rock was formed. They can also have fossils, which tell a story, too!d. Examples: sandstone, limestone, shale, and conglomerate

Page 20: layers of the earth

3. Metamorphic Rocks (means “change”)a. Formed from another rock by heat and pressure. b. Usually form beneath the earth’s crust (which means they often heat up and become magma again—it’s a cycle—the Rock Cycle!) c. Fact: Both igneous and sedimentary rocks can change into metamorphic rocks.d. Characteristics: These rocks are usually harder than the rocks that they were at first. e. They may have “bands” which look like stripes or layers from different minerals pressed together by the heat and pressure.

Examples:

gneiss, sl

ate,

schist

Page 21: layers of the earth

Rocks and Minerals

1. Minerals are made up of elements and compounds.

2. Rocks are made up of minerals.3. As minerals form, their atoms and

molecules form patterns that are crystal shapes.

Page 22: layers of the earth

4. Scientists identify minerals by:1. luster (how light bounces off of

it)2. streak (color of powder left

when a mineral is rubbed against a surface)

3. hardness (Moh’s Hardness Scale)

4. cleavage (how a mineral breaks apart)

5. density6. color

Page 23: layers of the earth

Weathering and Erosion1. Physical (mechanical) weathering happens when

the earth’s crust is exposed to water, air, and changes in temperature.

a. Rocks can wear away, making smaller rock pieces, or sediments.b. Freezing water expands, or takes up more space and can cause rocks to crack.

2. Chemical weathering happens when gases in the air chemically react with other elements and minerals.

a. Acid rain can dissolve limestone rocks.

Page 24: layers of the earth

3. Erosiona. Is the carrying away of weathered rock by gravity, water, wind, and iceb. Erosion can wash away boulders and mountains!

Examples: soil washed onto the sidewalk, crumbling rocks on buildings, holes in the road, cracked sidewalks, plants/roots growing by sidewalks, muddy streams

Page 25: layers of the earth

Examples of Erosion and Weathering

• Sea cliffs form when a rocky shore erodes at approximately the same rate throughout an area. This results in a steep walled structure. The cliff moves landward as the waves attack its base.

Page 26: layers of the earth

Examples of Erosion and Weathering

• A gully caused by severe rainstorms.