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Mountains Day 2 Students need: Textbook, practice book, pencil
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Mountains Day 2

Feb 22, 2016

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Robyn Wiegman

Mountains Day 2. Students need: Textbook, practice book, pencil. Turn to page 68 in your practice book. Fill in the graphic organizer as we read the story. As we read pages 318-319, listen for w hat causes the peaks of many tall m ountains to be covered with snow. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Mountains Day 2

MountainsDay 2

Students need:Textbook, practice book, pencil

Page 2: Mountains Day 2

• Turn to page 68 in your practice book. • Fill in the graphic organizer

as we read the story.

Page 3: Mountains Day 2

As we read pages 318-319, listen forwhat causes the peaks of many tallmountains to be covered with snow.

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Page through the selection, “Mountains” and look at the photographs and maps, and read the headings.

Think about what you think you will learn from this selection.

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What kinds of changes do mountains go through over time?

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What information does the author give about the Himalayan Mountains?

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Why are the peaks of tall mountains covered in snow?

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How do you know that the author used a cause-and-effect text structure?

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What does the map show?

How are Iceland and Surtsey related to the Mid-Atlantic ridge?

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How were the Rockies formed?

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How do time and pressure change rocks?

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How is a fault-blocked mountain formed?

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What kind of graphic organizer would you use to show how folded mountains are similar to and different from fault-block mountains?

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Use a Venn Diagram to show how two things are similar and different.

folded mountains

fault-blockmountainsboth

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Do you think that you would be likely to find fossils in a volcanic mountain?

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Why aren’t the Hawaiian Islands considered the tallest mountains onEarth?

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Kinds of Mountains

How They WereFormed

folded mountains Pressure pushed against rocks in the Earth’s crust.

fault-block Rocks broke when plates moved.

volcanic Lava and cinders piled up from a volcanic eruption.

dome Magma pushed up the Earth’s surface.

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What new concept does the author introduce on page 326? What text feature tells you this?

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Which words and phrases give you clues to the meaning of the word erosion?

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Compare and contrast the ways water and sand erode mountains.

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What causes rock slides and rock avalanches?

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What is one way that mountains affect weather and climate?

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What is the main idea of the final paragraph on page 329?

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