1 / 22

DO NOW

DO NOW. Finish Ecoregions Poster. Make sure your poster is…. DETAILED ATTRACTIVE COMPLETE When you finish your poster, tape in the Hallway in the correctly labeled section. Big Bend Video. Big Bend Geology: The Primeval Puzzle. DO NOW. Ecoregions Gallery Walk . High Plains.

tadita
Download Presentation

DO NOW

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. DO NOW

  2. Finish Ecoregions Poster • Make sure your poster is…. • DETAILED • ATTRACTIVE • COMPLETE • When you finish your poster, tape in the Hallway in the correctly labeled section

  3. Big Bend Video • Big Bend Geology: The Primeval Puzzle

  4. DO NOW

  5. Ecoregions Gallery Walk

  6. High Plains Palo Duro Canyon

  7. High Plains Plains

  8. South Texas Plains

  9. Gulf Coast Plains Padre Island

  10. Trans Pecos Santa Elena Canyon, Big Bend

  11. Trans Pecos Guadalupe Mountains

  12. DO NOW

  13. Station Rotation Expectations -You will have 6-8 minutes at each station -Stay with your group -Stay on task -Fill in the information on your students sheet for each station VOICE LEVELS 1-2

  14. Test Review Game • Using your white boards, be prepared to answer questions for your group

  15. DO NOW

  16. Enchanted Rock • Enchanted Rock, a pluton, or igneous rock intrusion, is a massive dome comprised of pink granite and rises 425 feet above the ground around it. This ancient monolith has been a part of human history for at least 11,000 years and covers a sprawling 640 acres. The name Enchanted Rock comes from an interpretation of Native American folklore and tradition by early Spanish and Anglo settlers. • One Tonkawa tradition holds that a group of braves, the last of their tribe, fought to the death on the top of Enchanted Rock defending themselves from another tribe. Another of the legends holds that a princess threw herself off the rock upon seeing her tribe being slaughtered. It is said that both the warriors and the princess' spirits haunt the granite monadnock. Tonkawa Indians also tell of phantom campfires atop the dome at night.

  17. Enchanted Rock • Part of the what makes the rock mysterious is that when a cool night follows a warm day, Enchanted Rock makes audible creaking noises. Though this is due to the contraction of the outer surface of the rock, it has likely fueled more legends which in turn increased the magical attributes ascribed to the batholith. Some say that the rock sparkles occasionally at night, most likely on damp nights with lots of moonlight. • Another fascinating feature of the rocks are the small pools of water (known as vernal pools) present in depressions on the rock. These pools are typically dry during the summer and fall months, yet house living marine animals such as shrimp or even small fish during the wetter spring.

  18. Ecoregions and Watersheds Quiz • Voice Level = 0 until all students are finished

More Related