Earth System and Recourse. Earth’s Layers The Earth’s crust is made up of a series of rigid plates, called tectonic plates, which move in response to.

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Earth System and Recourse

The Earth’s crust is made up of a series of rigid plates, called tectonic plates, which move in response to forces in the mantle.

There are three major concentric zones, layers: Core, Mantle, and Crust

Asthenosphere: very hot, party melted rock. Part of the mantle. Roughly 180km thick (112 miles)

Continental Crust: below the continent, mainly consist of igneous rocks about 5-10 km thick (15-56 miles)

Oceanic crust: below the oceans. Thinner than the continental crust. About 5-10 km thick ( 3.6-6.2 miles)

Lithosphere: outer shell of the earth, composed of crust and rigid

Mohorovicic discontinuity: the border between crust and mantle AKA MOHO

To Learn more about the rock cycle visit this website: http://www.learner.org/interactives/rockcycle/diagram.html

Divergent Plate- where the plates move apart in opposite directions

Convergent Plate Boundary- The plates are pushed together by internal forces

Transform Fault- where plates slide and grind past one another along a fracture (fault) in the lithosphere.

Animations: Divergent , Convergent, and Transformhttp://www.wwnorton.com/college/geo/animations/basic_plate_boundaries.htm

Transform: http://www.wwnorton.com/college/geo/animations/transform_faulting.htm

Nonrenewable resource: a concentration of naturally occurring material in or on the earth’s crust that can be extracted and processed into useful material at an affordable cost.

Metallic resources: iron, copper, and aluminum

Nonmetallic resources: salt, clay, sand, phosphates, and soil

Energy resources: coal, oil, natural gas, and uranium

Ore: rock containing enough of one or more metallic minerals to be mined profitably.

Overburden: soil and rock and usually discards it as waste material called spoils.

Types of surface mining: open-pit mining, dredging, area strip mining, contour strip mining, and mountaintop removal

Surface Mining Control Act: (1977) requires mining companies to restore most surface- mined land so it can be used for the same purpose as before it was mined

Removes coal and various metal ores that are too deep to be extracted by surface mining.

Disturbs less than one- tenth as much land as surface mining and produce less waste material.

Hazards: include cave-ins, explosions, and lung diseases (such as black lung) caused by prolonged inhalation of mining dust.

Environmental Effects of Mining

Steps

Mining

exploration, extraction

Processing

transportation, purification,manufacturing

Usetransportation or transmission

to individual user,eventual use, and discarding

Environmental Effects

Disturbed land; mining accidents;health hazards; mine waste dumping;oil spills and blowouts; noise;ugliness; heat

Solid wastes; radioactive material;air, water, and soil pollution;

noise; safety and healthhazards; ugliness; heat

Noise; ugliness;thermal water pollution;

pollution of air, water, and soil;solid and radioactive wastes;

safety and health hazards; heat

Mine, use, throw away;no new discoveries;rising prices

A

Recycle; increase reservesby improved miningtechnology, higher prices,and new discoveries

Recycle, reuse, reduceconsumption; increasereserves by improvedmining technology,higher prices, andnew discoveries

Depletion Times

The amount of time

it will take to use up a

certain proportion of

a mineral. (Typically 80%)B

C

Pro

du

ctio

n

Present Depletiontime A

Time

Depletiontime B

Depletiontime C

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