Forces that Change Earth’s Crust Name: ___________________________________________________________ Period: _____ Date: _______________ Essential Question: How is the Earth’s crust changed or renewed? 1. What are the forces that change Earth’s crust? __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 2. How is weathering and erosion responsible for this rock formation? __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3. Why are the rocks rounded and smooth? __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 4. What are the forces that changes Earth’s crust slowly and rapidly? __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 5. How do landforms change? __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 6. What are the three types of stresses inside Earth? __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 7. What is the difference Earth’s stress and strain? __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 8. What are the different types of deformation. __________________________________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 9. How is the Earth’s crust affected by weathering? __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 10. What type of climate is favorable for weathering? __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 11. What type of weathering is frost wedging? __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 12. How is weathering different from erosion and deposition? __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 13. What is the most common agent of erosion in the desert? __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 14. What is the agent of erosion responsible for slump and creep? __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 15. How could the removal of trees and other vegetation impact an environment? __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 16. Which is most likely a prevention strategy for flooding? __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 17. Which agent of erosion leads to the formation of sand dunes? __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 18. How can water be an agent for physical weathering? __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 19. Which of the following could increase the rate of chemical weathering of a rock? __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 20. Why are wind, water, and gravity major agents of erosion rather than weathering? __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 21. How are landforms made by deposition? __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 22. How are mountains formed? __________________________________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________ _________________________ _________________________ _________________________ _________________________ _________________________ 7. Matching Type: ______. ______. ______. A. divergent, tensional B. convergent, compressional C. transform, shear Key: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. D. A C D D B B, A, C B A WIND EROSION A cobble is a clast of rock with a particle size of 6.4 centimetres (2.5 in) to 25.6 centimetres (10.1 in) based on the Krumbein phi scale of sedimentology. Cobbles are generally considered to be larger than pebbles (4 to 64 millimetres diameter) and smaller than boulders (greater than 256 millimetres diameter). A rock made predominantly of cobbles is termed a conglomerate. pAR Beach cobbles at Nash Point, South Wales, PARTIALLY ROUNDED ROCKS https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cobble_(geology) https://biondoscience.wikispaces.com/7th+Grade+Unit+4+-+Weathering+%26+Erosion Glaciers Unless they have lived overseas or experienced severe frost in the inland, few of our students are familiar with the weathering effects of ice or have seen a glacier and the rock “milk” flowing from its maw. However our land surface was sculpted by the action of immense glaciers in Permo-Carboniferous (299Ma) times when the continent moved slowly across the South Pole to its present position. Displaced boulders carried by the ice can be seen in Coal seam National Park and great scratch marks, or striae, they cut into the underlying granites remain. The southern part of our state was affected again by the more recent (25ka) Pleistocene glaciation. It is likely that the south west of WA was covered in ice to a depth of five km. More recent glaciations were less extensive than earlier Permian ones. The party trick of lifting a needle using water can be performed when frozen water, an ice cube, is firmly pressed onto the needle. Pressure causes the ice to temporarily thaw then refreeze round the needle. A similar process allows glaciers to pick up deep scratches or striations loose rocks and then use them to cause on the land below. Geologists have recognised these scratches on rocks in the Canning Basin. When the glacier melts rapidly, contained unsorted debris is dumped in moraines. These can be seen south of the Stirling Ranges and are due to the most recent Ice Age. These processes are still occurring in Australian Antarctic Territories today. file:///C:/Users/rmangat/Downloads/Weathering_Erosion_Temperature_Water_-_Teacher_s_Notes.pdf
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