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2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE

2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

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Page 1: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

2013 DYNAMIC PLANETEVENT PREPARATION COURSE

Page 2: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

COURSE INSTRUCTOR:

Mark A. Van Hecke2013 Dynamic PlanetNational Event SupervisorCTT+ Certified Trainer

East China, [email protected]

Page 3: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

Coach

Students

Event Rules

SCIENCE OLYMPIAD EVENT TRAINING

Page 4: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

ABSORB

DO

CONNECT

APPLICATION OF HORTON’S ONLINE LEARNING PARADIGM TO SCIENCE OLYMPIAD

EVENT TRAINING

Page 5: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

A big part of success in Science Olympiad Earth-Space Science Events is the acquisition of a rich and diverse body of knowledge related to each of the events.

CONTENT KNOWLEDGE

This is the ‘absorb’ of the Lesson.

Page 6: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

Excursions are ‘side trips’ that we take when we are on vacation….the same goes for new experiences that we can learn about in our education.

EXCURSIONS

Page 7: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

Whenever you see this icon in the bottom right of your screen, just Click it to go to the Excursion

EXCURSIONS

Excursions are the ‘Do’ component of the Lesson.

Page 8: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

‘Hot Links’ refer to interesting websites that relate to what you are learning.

If you see the icon shown below in the bottom right of each slide, click it to access an interesting website that will help you to see or better understand what you are learning.

HOT LINKS

Page 9: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

You will also need to download the following textbook. Click the URL below to download it (PDF) at no cost.

http://gsscienceolympiad.wiki.elanco.net/file/view/Glaciers-Smith.pdf

TEXTBOOK

When you see it on the bottom right side of a slide, Click this Icon to see which pages you will need to read and what you should learn from the assignment.

Page 10: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

Certain Excursions and activities in a Lesson may require additional supplies.

OTHER THINGS YOU WILL NEED

Page 11: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

From time to time, we’ll pause the lesson to reflect on what we should have learned up to that point.

SUMMARIES

Page 12: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

At the end of the lesson, there will be several sample tournament questions to answer and/or problems to solve. This is the ‘connect’ of the lesson.

SAMPLE EVENT QUESTIONS

Page 13: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

LESSON ONE: WHAT ARE GLACIERS?

Page 14: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

1. How glaciers are formed

2. How to describe the structure of a glacier and identify a glacier’s zone of accumulation and zone of ablation.

What You’ll Learn in This Lesson:

3. How to determine the zones of accumulation and ablation of a glacier.

4. Explainthe ‘movement’ of glaciers and determine the direction of glacial flow.

Page 15: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

WHAT ARE GLACIERS?And why is it important to study them.

Page 16: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

A glacier is a perennial mass of ice that originates on land, and has movement.

Page 17: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

Glaciers store 75% of the Earth’s fresh water and cover about 15 million square kilometers-about 10% of our planet’s surface.

Page 18: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

If all of this ice melted, sea levels would rise about 70 meters worldwide.

Page 19: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

You could say that today’s glaciers are remnants from the last ‘Ice Age’, when ice covered 32% of the land and 30% of the oceans.

Page 20: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

From time to time, the climate of the Earth changes allowing cooler temperatures to endure for longer periods throughout the year.

Page 21: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

This allows glacial ice to expand into mid-latitude regions such as the Midwestern United States, New England and Northern Europe.

Page 22: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

These periods of expanding glacial ice are known as Ice Ages.

Page 23: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

Scientists know that over the past 750,000 years, there have been eight glacial ice age cycles.

Page 24: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

These Ice ages were separated by warmer periods known as interglacial periods.

Page 25: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

We are currently living in what is believed to be the end of an interglacial period.

Page 26: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

Glaciers also influence the direction of atmospheric and oceanic currents that regulate global temperature.

Page 27: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

Could the melting of glacial ice alter ocean and atmospheric currents creating a colder Earth?

Page 28: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

Or will ever-increasing levels of CO2 turn Earth into another Venus where daily temperatures exceed 800°F on most days?

Page 29: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

Glaciers also sculpt and shape the land leaving erosional and depositional landforms.

Page 30: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

Here in Michigan, the Great lakes were created by glaciers during the last Ice Age some 10,000 years ago.

Page 31: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

Glaciers also created thousands of kettle lakes throughout Michigan and other Midwestern states

Page 32: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

SUMMARY

• Glaciers are large masses of ice originating on land that form over an extended period of time.

• Gradual changes in Earth’s orbit over many thousands of years result in long periods of glacial ice covering the Northern Hemisphere followed by periods of warmth and glacial retreat (interglacial).

• Glaciers form many erosional and depositional landforms on the surface of the Earth.

• Glaciers also influence Earth’s atmospheric and oceanic currents.

Page 33: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

HOW ARE GLACIERS FORMED?

Page 34: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

A glacier will form in a given location if the amount of snowfall (accumulation) exceeds the rate of melting (ablation).

Page 35: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

In glacial formation, this is termed as the zone of accumulation.

Page 36: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

A glacier’s zone of accumulation is usually located at its highest elevation.

Page 37: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

As snow accumulates over time in a given location, each new layer of snow pushes down on the layers of older snow beneath it.

Page 38: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

As a result of this compression, older layers of snow are melted, crystallized and compacted together.

Page 39: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

Snowflakes are changed to firn- an intermediate stage between snow and ice.

Page 40: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

Individual ice crystals near the melting point become semiliquid and slick allowing them to glide over other crystal planes.

Page 41: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

As this ice is pushed further and further down by more accumulating snow, the crystals interlock and begin to look and behave more like rock.

Page 42: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

A glacier’s zone of melting (ablation) is usually located at its lowest elevation.

Page 43: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

This is termed a glacier’s zone of ablation.

Page 44: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

Formation of Glaciers

There are three criterion for a mass of ice to be a glacier:

• They are made of ice • They form on land• They have movement

Page 45: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

Glaciers are made of air, ice crystals, water and rock debris.

Page 46: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

Each of these components will be addressed in our study of glaciers. For now, let’s look at ice crystals-the building blocks of glaciers.

Page 47: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

Ice Crystals

Ice crystals are weak and can be made to slip on planes parallel to the basal plane as shown.

Page 48: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

As you will see this feature of ice crystals helps to explain their flow or ‘movement.’

Page 49: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

Density Of Water

One of water’s most unusual characteristics is its density.

Page 50: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

Unlike many substances, water in its solid state (ice) is less dense than it is in its liquid state.

Page 51: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

This means that liquid water may exist beneath some glaciers and that glaciers may even float

Page 52: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

GLACIERS FORM ON LAND

All glaciers form on land. Glaciers may extend into bodies of water such as lakes and oceans, but they do not originate in the water.

Page 53: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

MOVEMENT

Glaciers must have flow or movement.

Page 54: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

SUMMARY

• Glaciers form when the amount of snowfall exceeds the rate of melting

• In the process of glaciation, snow is changed into a compacted form known as firn. Firn is then further compacted into a dense glacial ice.

• Water in a solid state is less dense than water in a liquid state. This allows ice to float on top of water.

• The zone of accumulation is where glacial snow accumulates. The area where glacial melting exceeds the rate of accumulation is known as the zone of ablation.

Page 55: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

THE MOVEMENT OF GLACIAL ICE

Page 56: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

Glaciers move by the processes of internal deformation and basal sliding. Let’s take a look at how each of these processes work.

Page 57: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

Each snowflake is a hexagonal molecule with each oxygen atom bonded to a hydrogen atom in a ring as shown

Page 58: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

Glacial movement occurs when an accumulating mass of ice becomes too heavy to maintain its shape.

Page 59: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

The mass of glacial ice begins to move in a downslope direction over the top of this liquid, plasticized ice

Rotation of grains

Melting and freezing

Internal slipping

Page 60: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

Glacial calving occurs as glaciers move off to the sea and large chunks of ice break off from the main body of the glacier.

Page 61: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

Icebergs are chunks of calved ice that have broken off of the main body of the glacier and float in the ocean.

Page 62: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

SUMMARY

• The increased mass of a glacier at its zone of accumulation causes individual ice crystals near the bottom layer of the glacier to partially melt and become plastic allowing individual crystals to slide over one another across their basal planes

• Glaciers that reach a shoreline may ‘calve’ or break away from the main body of the glacier. If they drift into the sea they are known as Icebergs.

Page 63: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

SAMPLE EVENT QUESTIONS

Page 64: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

Diagram a GlacierIdentify Zones of Accumulation and Ablation

EXCURSION 1

Identify each of the layers shown in the process of glacial formation.

Page 65: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

EXCURSION 1

Move your mouse over the image shown of Malaspina Glacier until you locate the zone of accumulation.

Then do the same to locate the zone of ablation.

Page 66: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

The Density of Water

EXCURSION 2

Check out this excellent activity provided by New York University. In it you will attempt to explain why ice floats on top of water and do experiments to determine why. http://www.nyu.edu/pages/mathmol/modules/water/density_exp.html

Page 67: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

Determining the Direction of Glacial Ice Flow

EXCURSION 3

USGS topographic maps will often be used to identify different glacial features.

Look at the map on the next slide and answer the question shown below it.

Page 68: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

What direction did the glaciers flow? How can you tell? Back to Previous

Page 69: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

TEXTBOOK 1

Read pages 6-22 of Glaciers, Climate and Landscape

Back to Previous

Page 70: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

TEXTBOOK 2

According to Smith, how does glacial ice meet the criteria of being a mineral?

Back to Previous

Page 71: 2013 DYNAMIC PLANET EVENT PREPARATION COURSE. COURSE INSTRUCTOR: Mark A. Van Hecke 2013 Dynamic Planet National Event Supervisor CTT+ Certified Trainer

TEXTBOOK 3

Describe the ‘movement’ of glacial ice (pages 20-22).

Back to Previous