Investigation 3 – Go With The Flow

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Landforms Investigation 1: Schoolyard Models
Advertisements

Changes to the Earth’s Surface
Constructive and Destructive Forces that effect Earth’s Landforms
Lesson 1 Earth’s Landforms
Changes to Earth’s Surface Chapter 9
Wearing Down Earth’s Surface
Constructive & Destructive Forces on Landforms
Constructive and Destructive Landforms
Mr. Burton 2.3 Notes Please Grab: 1. Your folder. 2. Writing Utensil. 3. Answer the following question: How does the surface of the earth move?
A movement of the ground, caused by a sudden release of energy in Earth's crust. earthquake.
Chapter 6: Erosion & Deposition
Created by Science Teachers Unit 4 Lesson ChangesTimeForcesAgents
Chapter 2: Landforms of Georgia
Constructive and Destructive Landforms
Weathering, Erosion, and Landforms
Introduction To Earth Science. Earth’s Changing Surface.
Constructive & Destructive Forces
Constructive & Destructive Forces Shaping the Earth's Landscape
Constructive & Destructive Forces on Landforms
8.4 Landforms and Florida Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company 1.
Earth Science Review.
Changing Earth’s Surface Changing Earth's Surface Weathering –The process that breaks down and changes rocks that are exposed at Earth’s surface 8.1.
Mrs. Thornburg’s version. Vocabulary in 5 th Grade Science Ch. 2 EarthquakeWeathering MagmaJetty LandformEpicenter Sand duneSinkhole DeltaErosion LavaFault.
Core 1. -the center of the Earth 2 Mantle 3 the middle of the Earth made up of molten (melted) rock 4.
Internal Forces that Shape the Earth (Plate Actions)
Erosion and Deposition
What Causes this Landform? Answers. A canyon is an example of a landform caused by erosion by a river.
Constructive & Destructive Forces. EQ: What is the difference between a Constructive Force and a Destructive Force?
1. Name each part of the volcano Today’s Standard: The student will describe how landforms are the result of a combination of constructive and.
Earth Science Study Guide. How would a glacier affect the landscape of a state?
5 minute check November 6, 2013 What is the difference between a constructive and a destructive force ? The student will describe how landforms.
Constructive and Destructive Forces
Changes to the Earth’s Surface: Erosion
Chapter 4 Lesson 3.
Chapter 2 Landforms. Landform A natural land shape or feature.
Ahmad Ali media productions presents… PART ONE.
Stone Mountain.
LANDFORMS AND OCEANS Science Standard 5-3 The student will demonstrate an understanding of features, processes, and changes in Earth's land and oceans.
Grade 6 Science Enrichment.  Landforms are the physical features on the Earth’s surface such as, valleys, rivers, mountains, and plateaus.  Forces such.
Landforms.
Section Nine Earth Science Landforms and Changes to Earth’s Surface.
Chapter 10 Lesson 1 How Does Earth’s surface change?
Constructive and Destructive Forces Plate : A section of Earth’s crust and mantle that fits together with other sections like puzzle pieces.
Changes to Earth’s Surface
Landform and Oceans 5.E.3B.1 Analyze and interpret data to describe and predict how natural processes (such as weathering, erosion, deposition, earthquakes,
Constructive & Deconstructive Processes
Ch. 9 Water Erosion and Deposition
Core -the center of the Earth
Weathering & Erosion Chapter 4 Lesson 3 Page 192.
Round Table Jeopardy.
Weathering, Erosion and Deposition
4th grade Earth Science Part 2
Changes to Earth’s Surface Chapter 9
JEOPARDY!.
Landforms.
LANDFORMS Science Standard 5-3
Deposition the dropping of sediment or particles by water, wind, or ice.
Science: Constructive and Destructive Forces Vocabulary
Constructive and Destructive Forces Review
Destructive Forces.
Weathering and Erosion
Water Erosion and Deposition
Physical Geography.
Weathering and Erosion
Constructive and Destructive Forces that effect Earth’s Landforms
Earth and Space Science
Chapter 1 - Lesson 1 Shaping Earth’s Surface/ People Change the Land
Destructive Forces.
Constructive & Destructive Forces on Landforms
Constructive and Destructive Forces Chapter 2
Presentation transcript:

Investigation 3 – Go With The Flow Landforms Investigation 3 – Go With The Flow

Part 1: Slope Vocabulary Main Ideas Slope - the angle or slant of a stream channel or land surface Main Ideas Canyons are deeper and deltas are longer in a stream table model with a steep slope. Water flowing through channels with steep slopes causes more erosion.

Part 2: Flood Vocabulary Main Ideas Flood – a very heavy flow of water, which is greater than the normal flow of water and goes over the stream’s normal channel. Flash Flood – rises and falls rapidly with little or no advanced warning. Can be caused by heavy rainfall, dam failure, or the thaw of an ice jam. Main Ideas Floods erode an unusual amount of material. Floods erode materials more quickly than normal water flow.

Science Stories Rivers and Controlling the Flow River Features Many factors influence the shape of the land around river channels: Earth materials underneath Force of the water Amount of sand and rock carried along by the river

Science Stories Rivers and Controlling the Flow As a river continues downstream, it often flows over wide areas of sediment called flood plains Sediment is deposited by the river when it overflows its banks and floods nearby land A large river may speed up as it nears its mouth, however it actually slows when it reaches the mouth.

Science Stories Rivers and Controlling the Flow Mississippi River Begins at a small lake in Minnesota. Divided into 2 regions – 1) fast, clear flowing section and 2) a more sluggish, sediment-filled section. Drains the central portion of the country (40% of the US). Important for commerce and transportation. Hudson River Begins in Adirondack Mountains and extends to NY Harbor. Discovered by Henry Hudson in 1609 (thought it connected the Atlantic and Pacific oceans). Important drainage basin in the Northeast.

Science Stories Rivers and Controlling the Flow History of Flow Control A levee is an embankment or mound along a river’s edge. Miles of levees line the Mississippi River. Natural levees formed when rivers deposit large quantities of sediment after a flood Artificial levees are higher and wider Erie Canal was built to connect the Hudson River to the Great Lakes.

Part 3 Vocabulary Main Ideas Levee – an embankment along a stream that protects land from flooding. Levees can be natural or constructed. Dam – a construction or wall across a river that holds back water flowing through the river, creating a reservoir or lake. Floodplain – area around a river that is covered by water flowing over the riverbank during a flood. Main Ideas People control the flow of water in a river with dams, levees, and new channels.

Science Stories Shapes of the Earth Landforms result from a combination of constructive and destructive forces: Constructive include crust deformations (i.e., mountains), volcanic eruptions (i.e., islands), and deposition of sediment (i.e., deltas, islands) Destructive include weathering and erosion (i.e., canyons, caverns)

Science Stories Shapes of the Earth The Earth’s surface is constantly in motion Crust is broken into 30 tectonic plates Beneath the crust is the mantle, which is made out of molten rock, or magma. The crust floats on the molten rock When plates collide, they push upward against each other, creating mountains (uplift). Mountains also form when magma pushes up a portion of the crust.

Science Stories Shapes of the Earth Earthquakes happen when two plates move past each other along a fault, or break in the Earth’s surface. Volcanoes form where plates collide and where they pull apart (rift). They also form over hot spots in the middle of plates. Waves can deposit sand and soil and create beaches and sand dunes. They can also erode the shoreline.

Science Stories Shapes of the Earth Glaciers are large, moving pieces of ice. They are unpredictable and ever-changing, and change the shape of the land. They move slow, but pick up boulders, sand, and other sediment as they move, and deposit them in a new place. Caverns are formed from either: 1) acid rain dissolving limestone 2) action of waves against sea cliffs 3) sand carried by strong wind 4) cooling lava Sinkholes are caused by caverns forming too close to the surface and the ceiling collapsing.