What things change the Earth’s surface slowly?. Slow Changes to the Earth’s Surface Process is a synonym for change. Slow Process- A change that occurs.

Post on 19-Jan-2016

232 Views

Category:

Documents

0 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

Transcript

What things change the Earth’s surface slowly?

Slow Changes to the Earth’s Surface

Process is a synonym for change. Slow Process- A change that occurs

slowly and steadily over time. Four types of erosion slowly change the

Earth’s surface:GlaciersWindRunning WaterWaves

What is Erosion?

Erosion- The wearing and carrying away of soil and rock particles by waves, wind, running water, or glaciers.

After rocks are weathered down into sediment and soil, it is carried away by erosion.

The Grand Canyon was created by erosion. Windand running water help to shape the canyon.

Other Erosion Examples

What type of erosion created this rock formation?

What type of erosion formed this water arch?

Glaciers Glaciers- a large mass of ice and

snow that form when more snow falls in winter than melts in the summer. It moves when gravity pulls it downhill.

Glaciers change the earth by dragging rock debris and carving the land.

How do you think these glacierschange the Earth’s surface as they move downhill?

What is an Ice Age?

During the Ice Age:

1. Glaciers covered as much as 1/3 of the Earth.

2. Temperatures were low.

3. Snowfall was heavy.

Physical Weathering Physical Weathering- The wearing away

of rock by wind and moving water. For example, the Grand Canyon was formed by wind and water erosion.

Chemical Weathering

Chemical Weathering- Weathering that results in changes of minerals that make up rocks. Acid rain is an example.

Biological Weathering

Biological Weathering- The wearing down of rock by living things. For example, plant roots break up rocks as they grow.

Closing Questions

1. How does wind change the Earth’s surface?

2. How does running water and waves change the Earth’s surface?

3. How do glaciers change the Earth’s surface?

4. What are the three types of weathering and how are they different?

http://player.discoveryeducation.com/index.cfm?guidAssetId=D189A292-B20E-4767-8693-DBDB52D2DB09&blnFromSearch=1&productcode=US

top related