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Table 4 Sumi Cha, Eric Mason, Joana Espinoza, & Stacey Cherukara
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Getting to know your Base Group through Geology

Jan 15, 2016

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Getting to know your Base Group through Geology. Table 4 Sumi Cha, Eric Mason, Joana Espinoza, & Stacey Cherukara. South Korea, Jeju Island. By Sumi Cha. Cheonjiyeon : a geologic feature specific to my country of ancestry. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Getting to know your Base Group through Geology

Table 4

Sumi Cha, Eric Mason, Joana Espinoza, & Stacey Cherukara

Page 2: Getting to know your Base Group through Geology

By Sumi Cha

Page 3: Getting to know your Base Group through Geology

Cheonjiyeon is a waterfall located on Jeju Island in the country of South Korea. The meaning of Cheonjiyeon is a waterfall connecting the sky (Ch'eon) and land (ji). It attracts many tourists . Cheonjiyeon is one of the three most famous waterfalls on Jeju Island.

Page 4: Getting to know your Base Group through Geology

By Eric Manson

My country of ancestry is Puerto Rico. There is an extensive cave system throughout the island. Here is a picture of the mouth of the caves in Camuy, Puerto Rico.

Page 5: Getting to know your Base Group through Geology

By Joana Espinoza

Chimbarazo volcano: The highest volcano on earth.

Ecuador

Page 6: Getting to know your Base Group through Geology

By Stacy Cherukara

Page 7: Getting to know your Base Group through Geology

The Himalayas are known to be one of the highest mountain systems in the world, also one of the youngest mountain ranges.

It extends for about 2500 km and covers about 500,000 sq. km.

It contains the world’s highest peak- Everest and about ten peaks rising above 7,500 meters.

The Himalayas have risen as a result of a collision between the drifting of the Indian plate and the Tibetan plate of South Asia about 50 MILLION years ago.

Page 8: Getting to know your Base Group through Geology
Page 9: Getting to know your Base Group through Geology

Earthquakes are very common in Los Angeles, CA. I went to LA for the first time in the summer of 2009. While I was there, I experienced something I’ve never in my life experienced, an earthquake. It wasn’t a big one, but it seemed like it to me. People in LA seem to be fine with it, like it happens everyday. Experiencing an earthquake to me was something completely new .

By Sumi Cha

Page 10: Getting to know your Base Group through Geology

By Eric Manson

While me and my family were in Puerto Rico we experience rising levels of water in the ocean first hand. We stayed on a hotel on the beach with a bar and when we came back the next year the water level was directly up to the bar and most of the beach was gone.

Page 11: Getting to know your Base Group through Geology

By Joana Espinoza

Earthquake’s are some what common in Las Vegas Nevada. I did not experience the earthquake but my mom went to celebrate her anniversary about a year ago, and there was a minor earth quake. Although it was minor earthquakes can still be very dangerous.

Page 12: Getting to know your Base Group through Geology

By Stacy Cherukara

This past April of 2009 my mom went to her native town of Kerala, India for her niece’s wedding. When she was there she experienced an Earthquake from a neighboring city of Calcutta. Her experience wasn’t as bad as I expected, she had said that she only felt aftershocks. Earthquakes are caused by two major reasons. First is the eruption of volcanoes which are sudden and can affect the plates which is the second cause of earthquakes. Earthquakes are caused due to disturbance in the movement of plates.

Page 13: Getting to know your Base Group through Geology
Page 14: Getting to know your Base Group through Geology

Kobe: NEFA Fire Investigation Report by National Fire Protection Association“On Tuesday, January 17, 1995, at 5:46 a.m., a 20-second earthquake measuring 6.8 on the Richter Scale occurred near the Japanese port of Kobe. The quake, which was an order of magnitude larger than the Northridge Earthquake in January 1994, killed more than 6,000 people, injured at least 30,000, and left more than 300,000 people homeless. More than 100,000 buildings were severely damaged or destroyed by the quake and the fires it caused. 148 separate fires destroyed 6,513 buildings and an area of 624,671 m2 (0.24 sq mi). The total dollar loss, including damage to buildings, transportation systems, and other portions of the infrastructure, has been estimated between ¥13 trillion and ¥20 trillion (U.S. $147 billion and U.S. $200 billion).”

By Sumi Cha

Page 15: Getting to know your Base Group through Geology

By Eric Manson

As water levels rise it may not be as apparent to people in a city like Chicago but in Puerto Rico where people live so close to the ocean the signs of global warming causing water levels to rise is something many people are concerned about and is affecting the global community directly since we all live on this planet.

Page 16: Getting to know your Base Group through Geology

Earthquakes affect everyone around the world. They destroy homes and lakes etc. Many people also lose family members during an earthquake.

By Joana EspinozaEffect of Earthquakes

Page 17: Getting to know your Base Group through Geology

Earthquakes –Effect on the world By Stacy Cherukara

Various damaging effects to the areas they act upon. Damage to buildings, bridges. And dams produced by the rumbling of the earthquakes. Loss of human lives and often displacement of homes. Triggering land slides, producing floods, tsunamis, tidal waves, fires, broken gas lines and spills of hazardous chemicals.