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Earth Layers Foldable

Earth Layers Foldable. The Layers of the Earth © Copyright 2006. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved

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Page 1: Earth Layers Foldable. The Layers of the Earth © Copyright 2006. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved

Earth Layers Foldable

Page 2: Earth Layers Foldable. The Layers of the Earth © Copyright 2006. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved

The Layers of the Earth

© Copyright 2006.  M. J. Krech. All rights reserved.

Page 3: Earth Layers Foldable. The Layers of the Earth © Copyright 2006. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved

The Four Layers The Earth is composed of four

different layers. The crust is the layer that you live on, and it is the most widely studied

and understood. The mantle is much hotter and has the

ability to flow. The outer core and inner core are even hotter with pressures so great you would be squeezed into a ball smaller than a marble if you were able to go to the center of the Earth!

Page 4: Earth Layers Foldable. The Layers of the Earth © Copyright 2006. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved

The Crust

The crust is composed of two rocks. The continental crust is mostly granite. The oceanic crust is basalt. Basalt is much denser than the granite. Because of this the less dense continents ride on the denser oceanic plates.

The Earth's Crust is like the skin of an apple. It is very thin in comparison to the other three layers. The crust is only about 3-5 miles (8 kilometers) thick under the oceans (oceanic crust) and about 25 miles (32 kilometers) thick under the continents (continental crust).

Page 5: Earth Layers Foldable. The Layers of the Earth © Copyright 2006. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved

The Lithosphere

The crust and the upper layer of the mantle together make up a zone of rigid, brittle rock called the Lithosphere.

Page 6: Earth Layers Foldable. The Layers of the Earth © Copyright 2006. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved

The Lithospheric Plates

The crust of the Earth is broken into many pieces called plates. The plates "float" on the soft, semi-rigid asthenosphere.

Page 7: Earth Layers Foldable. The Layers of the Earth © Copyright 2006. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved

The Asthenosphere

The asthenosphere is the semi-rigid part of the middle mantle that flows like hot asphalt under a heavy weight.

Page 8: Earth Layers Foldable. The Layers of the Earth © Copyright 2006. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved

The Mantle

The Mantle is the largest layer of the Earth at 2900 km thick. The middle mantle is composed of very hot dense rock that flows like asphalt under a heavy weight. The movement of the middle mantle (asthenosphere) is the reason that the crustal plates of the Earth move.

Page 9: Earth Layers Foldable. The Layers of the Earth © Copyright 2006. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved

Convection Currents

The middle mantle "flows" because of convection currents. Convection currents are caused by the very hot material at the deepest part of the mantle rising, then cooling and sinking again --repeating this cycle over and over.

Page 10: Earth Layers Foldable. The Layers of the Earth © Copyright 2006. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved

The Outer Core

The core of the Earth is like a ball of very hot metals. The

outer core is so hot that the metals in it are all in the liquid state. The outer core is composed of the melted metals of nickel and iron.

Page 11: Earth Layers Foldable. The Layers of the Earth © Copyright 2006. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved

The Inner Core

The inner core of the Earth has temperatures and pressures so great that the metals are squeezed together and are not able to move about like a liquid, but are forced to vibrate in place like a solid.

Page 12: Earth Layers Foldable. The Layers of the Earth © Copyright 2006. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved

The End

In your lab group, discuss the following question:

Have we ever seen part of the Mantle? Explain.

© Copyright 2006.  M. J. Krech. All rights reserved.

Page 13: Earth Layers Foldable. The Layers of the Earth © Copyright 2006. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved

Question Sheet

• Use your foldable and the textbook (pages 72-73) to answer the questions.

• Turn in to basket

• Pick up the lab sheet

Page 14: Earth Layers Foldable. The Layers of the Earth © Copyright 2006. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved

Traveling Quiz

• Your group will need ONE sheet of paper.• Write ALL team members names on it and the hour.• Person #1 will start, the paper will rotate to #2 and so on.

Continue until the quiz is complete.

TASK: draw and label the layers of the earth

Extra points awarded for additional and correct information

Page 15: Earth Layers Foldable. The Layers of the Earth © Copyright 2006. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved

Layers of the Earth

Page 16: Earth Layers Foldable. The Layers of the Earth © Copyright 2006. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved

• How far have scientists drilled into the earth?

• 7.6 miles– Only 0.2% of the distance to the earth’s

core

Page 17: Earth Layers Foldable. The Layers of the Earth © Copyright 2006. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved

Mystery Boxes

• In your lab groups, determine what is inside the box

• How does this activity connect to the layers of the Earth?

Page 18: Earth Layers Foldable. The Layers of the Earth © Copyright 2006. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved

How do we know so much about what’s under Earth’s surface?

• Through INDIRECT EVIDENCE, mostly from seismic waves caused by earthquakes (more on this later this semester...)

• Sometimes indirect evidence is the only option for scientists to develop a theory

• Lets give it a try...

Page 19: Earth Layers Foldable. The Layers of the Earth © Copyright 2006. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved

So...here’s what scientists know...

• Please add the following notes to the notes section of your binder.

• It is suggested that you write down the underlined notes

Page 20: Earth Layers Foldable. The Layers of the Earth © Copyright 2006. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved

Earth’s 4 main Layers

• Crust

• Mantle

• Outer Core

• Inner Core

Page 21: Earth Layers Foldable. The Layers of the Earth © Copyright 2006. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved

The Crust

• The crust, the outermost layer, is rigid and very thin

• Oceanic Crust (beneath the ocean) is about 5 km thick

• Continental Crust (under land) averages about 30 km and 100 km deep.

• Like the shell of a hardboiled egg

Page 22: Earth Layers Foldable. The Layers of the Earth © Copyright 2006. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved

Mantle

• The Mantle is a dense, hot layer of semi-solid rock approximately 2,900 km thick.

• The mantle contains more iron, magnesium, and calcium than the crust

• is hotter and denser because temperature and pressure inside the Earth increase with depth.

• As a comparison, the mantle might be thought of as the white of a boiled egg.

Page 23: Earth Layers Foldable. The Layers of the Earth © Copyright 2006. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved

The Crust• the core, is nearly twice as dense as the mantle

because its composition is metallic (iron-nickel alloy).

• the Earth's core is made up of two distinct parts: – a 2,200 km-thick liquid outer core – a 1,250 km-thick solid inner core

– As the Earth rotates, the liquid outer core spins, creating the Earth's magnetic field.

Page 24: Earth Layers Foldable. The Layers of the Earth © Copyright 2006. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved

The Lithosphere

• Lithosphere= the crust and the uppermost part of mantle

Page 25: Earth Layers Foldable. The Layers of the Earth © Copyright 2006. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved

The Asthenosphere• Asthenosphere= the fluid like portion of the

mantle that lies just below lithosphere. The lithosphere “floats” on the asthenosphere

Page 26: Earth Layers Foldable. The Layers of the Earth © Copyright 2006. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved

Practice Quiz Question• Can you label the following layers?

Page 27: Earth Layers Foldable. The Layers of the Earth © Copyright 2006. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved