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Classroom presentations to accompany Understanding Earth , 3rd edition

Classroom presentations to accompany Understanding Earth , 3rd edition. prepared by Peter Copeland and William Dupré University of Houston. Chapter 1 Building a Planet. Understanding the Earth System. ...just like chemistry and physics! Geologists face the special

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Classroom presentations to accompany Understanding Earth , 3rd edition

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  1. Classroom presentations to accompany Understanding Earth, 3rd edition prepared by Peter Copeland and William Dupré University of Houston Chapter 1 Building a Planet

  2. Understanding the Earth System

  3. ...just like chemistry and physics! Geologists face the special challenge of not being able to do experiments in the sense that chemists and physicists do. Geology is a science...

  4. The universe is sensible and governed by immutable rules. Scientific principles

  5. The scientific method 1) Make an observation about the sensible world. 2) Develop an explanation (hypothesis) that predicts the outcome of other observations or experiments.

  6. 3a) Make new experiments. The scientific method (cont.) 3b) Make new observations.

  7. The scientific method (cont.) return to step 2 return to step 3 4) Do the results match the predictions of the hypothesis ? Reject the hypothesis no yes

  8. The scientific method Simply put: Always ask yourself, “How will I know if I’m wrong?”

  9. A hypothesis is an explanation initially offered for a set of observations. When a hypothesis withstands many tests it may be called a theory. A theory for which it seems there to be no sensible reasons to challenge is called a law. Hypothesis - Theory - Law

  10. Parsimonious(is the simplest explanation available) Consilient(explains a wide range of phenomena) A good theory is...

  11. Observational: maps rock types, distributions, structures microscopic investigations Experimental: chemical geophysical What are the data used in geology?

  12. Since geologists are interested in systems that are very big (hundreds of km) and that have evolved over long periods of time (millions of years), they cannot conduct controlled experiments. They must observe the results of Nature’s experiments that are already complete. The problem of experiments

  13. Natural laws do not change — however, rates and intensity of processes may. Uniformitarianism The present is the key to the past — James Hutton

  14. The big difference between geology and other sciences: TIME (Geologically speaking, not much happens in a human lifetime!) Rates of geologic processes: µm/year to cm/year Big earthquakes may displace the ground several meters in a few seconds, but they occur only every 500 years or so. TIME

  15. The rates of geologic processes are almost always slower than the rates of human effects on the environment. TIME

  16. The official SI unit of time is the second, but it would be very inconvenient to use this unit in geology; even the year is too small in most cases. Therefore, geologists use millions of years as the standard unit of time: 10 Ma = 10 million years ago 10 m.y. = an interval of time lasting 10 million years TIME

  17. Some geologic features take millions of years to form. Fig. 1.1 Carr Clifton

  18. Others take seconds! Fig. 1.1 John Sanford/Photo Researchers

  19. Pick a theory, any theory, but it must be consistent with these facts: 1) Planets all revolve around the Sun in the same direction in nearly circular orbits. 2) The angle between the axis of rotation and the plane of orbit is small (except Uranus). 3) All planets (except Venus and Uranus) rotate in the same direction as their revolution; their moons do, too. Origin of solar system

  20. 4) Each planet is roughly twice as far as the next inner planet is from the Sun (the Titus-Bode rule). 5) 99.9 % of mass is in the Sun; 99 % of angular momentum is in the planets. 6) Planets in two groups: terrestrial (inner): Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars Mercury is mostly Fe ( = 5.4) Jovian (outer): Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune. Jupiter mostly gas and ice (  = 0.7) Pluto ???? 7) Terrestrial planets are mostly O, Si, Fe, Mg. The Sun is almost entirely H & He (also important in Jovian planets). Origin of solar system

  21. Primeval slowly rotating gas cloud (nebula) condensed into several discrete blobs. fitsdoesn't fit rotation angular momentum mass Nebular hypothesis

  22. Portions of the Sun were torn off by a passing star: planetesimals then collided to form planets. Problems: gases coming from Sun would be too hot to condense; stellar collision exceedingly rare. Collision hypothesis

  23. Large gas cloud begins to condense. Most mass in the center, turbulence in outer parts. Turbulent eddies collect matter meters across; small chunks grow and collide, eventually becoming large aggregates of gas and solid chunks. Protoplanets, much bigger than present planets, eventually contracted due to their own gravity. Protoplanet hypothesis

  24. Evolution of the Solar System Fig. 1.2a

  25. Evolution of the Solar System Fig. 1.2b

  26. Evolution of the Solar System Fig. 1.2c

  27. Evolution of the Solar System Fig. 1.2d

  28. Our Solar System Fig. 1.3

  29. Only a little smaller than Mercury (small planet in two-planet system). Surface of the moon very different from the surface of Earth. No atmosphere, therefore, no weathering. The Moon

  30. Formation of the Moon Fig. 1.4 Alfred T. Kamajian

  31. Timeline for the Sun, Earth, and Moon Fig. 1.5 Extensively modified from D.J. DePaolo, Nature

  32. The evolutionary course is significantly influenced by the initial state. We know the state of the Earth today relatively well; knowing the beginning will help constrain the in between. Why worry about the beginning?

  33. A Differentiating Planet Fig. 1.6

  34. An Early Homogeneous Earth Fig. 1.6a

  35. Differentiation Begins Fig. 1.6b

  36. Fig. 1.6c

  37. Relative Abundance of Elements Fig. 1.7

  38. Lithosphere Hydrosphere Atmosphere Biosphere Fig. 1.9

  39. Interacting Earth Systems Fig. 1.8

  40. The unifying concept of the Earth sciences. The outer portion of the Earth is made up of about 20 distinct “plates” (~ 100 km thick) that move relative to each other. This motion is what causes earthquakes and forms mountain ranges. Plate tectonics

  41. lithosphere: the outer rigid shell of the earth (~ 100 km). The plates are composed of this material. asthenosphere: part of mantle beneath lithosphere. The lithosphere rides ONTOP of the asthenosphere. Plate tectonics

  42. Earth’s Crust, Lithosphere, and Asthenosphere Fig. 1.11

  43. Present-day Plates Fig. 1.12 Pete W. Sloss, NOAA-NESDIS-NGDC

  44. Convection in the Kitchen Fig. 1.13a

  45. Convection in the Earth Fig. 1.13b

  46. 1. Divergent 2. Convergent 3. Strike-slip (transform,conservative) Three types of plate boundaries

  47. Three Types of Plate Boundaries Fig. 1.14

  48. Fig. 1.14a

  49. Fig. 1.14b

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