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Tree Rings Bilingual section IES Pedro de Valdivia.

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Presentation on theme: "Tree Rings Bilingual section IES Pedro de Valdivia."— Presentation transcript:

1 Tree Rings Bilingual section IES Pedro de Valdivia

2 Starter Can you, in groups of 4, find the value of Pi? You have 4 pieces of string (20, 30, 40 and 50 cm in length), a piece of graph paper and a ruler. Go!!!

3 Dendrochronology? It’s all greek to me!

4 Dendrochronology Pronounced den – dro - kron – o - la – gee Word roots dendro (from dendros, greek for tree) chrono (from chronos, greek for time or past events) logy (from logos, greek for reason or word. “ology” indicates a study or theory)

5 What are tree rings? Growth – varies throughout year in our climate Late Spring/Summer – wide light coloured ring (lots of growth) Late summer/autumn – narrow darker ring (little growth) Winter – dormant (no growth)

6 From LTTR, Arizona So one year’s growth is a dark and light ring together = annual growth ring = X X

7 From LTTR, Arizona Earlywood – appears light in colour – cells are thin walled and large in diameter Latewood – appears dark in colour – cells have thick walls and are small in diameter Total ring width = a light and dark band

8 Photos by Grassino-Mayer at UTK (see web address)

9 X An aerial photo of the wooded area before the felling in 2002. X marks the area where the felled trees came from at grid reference 832396 Courtesy of Multimap

10 x

11 An area of pine trees showing how close together they are as they grow

12 The area after the trees were felled in autumn 2002

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14 Young pine trees ready to plant in the cleared area in 2004

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16 A pupil, Bielby junior, collecting measurements from felled pines

17 Task 1. Is there a relationship between the age (number of rings) and the diameter of the tree?

18 Stop here to do task

19 Tree RingsTree Diameter(cm) 56 67 77 77 88 1112 1411 1412 1412 1817 1816 1816 1916 1917 1918 2019 20 2214 2518 2618 2721 2723 2823 2921 3023 3028 3026 3128 3218 3230 3225 3235 33 3633 3633 3631 3826 3832 3835 3940 3931 3931 4024 4021 4127 4129 4134 4231 4229 4240 4232 4336 4424 4436 4452 4534 4742 4744 4932 4948 5051 39 5326

20

21 Diameter of tree (cm)Number of tree rings 78 1211 15.518 17 18.522 2019 2427 2527 3045 3335 3433 4037

22

23 Task 2. Marking off actual years and events on a tree section

24 2002 The year England won the world cup? The new millenium? ? When were you born?

25 Put in some important dates

26 Task 3. Is there a relationship between the shape of the tree section and where it grew?

27 Look at the shape of this cross section of a tree trunk. What is unusual about the shape? Think about how it has grown Think about where it might have been in the group of trees that were cut down (go back to the photo and map on slides 9 and 10)

28 Task 4. Is there a relationship between the width of the summer ring and the weather that year? See slide 6

29 Current Useful Websites about Tree Rings and Dendrochronology Sites for primary pupils http://www.safetreekids.net/index.html A public education programme of the Pacific Gas and Electric Company. It has a section on tree rings and an activity to draw rings on downloadable cartoon tree sections. Sites for secondary pupils Tree Rings: A Study of Climate Change http://vathena.arc.nasa.gov/curric/land/global/treestel.html A very comprehensive site that has a glossary, very readable text and a series of activities to help pupils understand the relationship between tree ring growth and climate.

30 Sites for teachers Henri D. Grissino-Mayer's Ultimate Tree-Ring Web Pages http://web.utk.edu/~grissino/principles.htmhttp://web.utk.edu/~grissino/principles.htm and............/gallery.htm Ideal for a teacher who wants to know a little more about the subject. There is an extensive gallery that has some very clear images of tree rings in a variety of species that could be used to help pupils understand the principle of tree aging. Oxford Dendrochronology Laboratory Daniel Miles, Michael Worthington, and Dr Martin Bridge http://www.dendrochronology.com/ Technical site that would be useful for background information for the teacher. The University of Arizona. The Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research Dendrochronology http://www.ltrr.arizona.edu/dendrochronology.html A very detailed site with clear explanations about tree rings supported with comprehensive illustrations. Title: Tree Rings - Dendrochronology (2 Lessons) Prepared by: Claudia Marosz, Garden Grove Unified School District, Westminster, CA, USA http://www-sci.lib.uci.edu/SEP/CTS/TreeRing.html A rather complex site but there is an excellent description of tree rings by Bruce Palmer (very readable for secondary pupils) if you scroll to the bottom of the page. Tree Rings. A cursory look at these well known features by Paul James, UK Published in the January 2002 edition of Micscape Magazine the on-line monthly magazine of the Microscopy UK web. http://www.microscopy-uk.org.uk/mag/artjan02/treering.html An excellent gallery of sections of a variety of trees.


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