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AP Environmental Science
Earth Systems
In the beginning….
• Our Universe began as a very
hot, very dense cloud of high
energy hydrogen plasma
• The “Big Bang” is the finite
point, 13.7 BYA when for
some reason the universe
started to expand in all
directions
• The universe has expanded
and cooled ever since this
point
• In the first microseconds after the big bang,
elementary particles (quarks and leptons)
dominated the universe independently
• As the universe cooled, layer upon layer of
structure began to form, first neutrons and
protons atomic nuclei  atoms stars 
galaxies  galaxy clusters
• Our universe is now populated by an
estimated 100 billion galaxies, each with 100
billion stars each of those having planets
orbiting
How do we know, why do we
think..
• 1) We know that the universe is
expanding
▫ By looking at the color of distance stars we
can tell whether they are approaching or
receeding
▫ If the color of the star appears blue
(blueshift) then the star is approaching
earth, shortening the wavelengths of light
turning it blue
• If the color appears red(redshift) then the
distance between us and the star is
increasing stretching the wavelengths of light
shifting them toward the longer red
wavelengths
• The further the distance between us and the
star the greater the redshift because they are
travelling at higher speeds (Edwin
Hubble,1929)
• This is known as a Doppler wobble or Doppler
shift
http://diagrammar.wordpress.com/
• 2)Helium and Deuterium is universally
abundant, and predates the formation of
stars.
▫ The only things today beside nuclear bombs
that can create these elements are stars
• 3) Cosmic Background Radiation
▫ When looking at the sky with a radio
telescope, there is a universal “glow” of
microwaves the blankets the universe.
▫ The uniformity indicates one original source
of the radiation, the big bang
http://www.ugcs.caltech.edu/~yukimoon/BigBang/BigBang.htm
Temperature variations of the cosmic background radiation as measured
by WMAP ( difference between colors is 0.0002 Kelvin, average
temperature 2.75 Kelvin)
http://faculty.washington.edu/
Home Sweet Home in the Milky
Way
• The Milky Way is a barred spiral galaxy
• 100,000 light years in diameter
• 1000 light years in thickness
• 100 -400 billion stars
• Oldest star is 13.2 BYO
• We are located 26,000 light years from
the galactic center
• We are spiraling at roughly 552km/s
Infrared image of the center of the Milky Way Galaxy taken by the Spitzer Space
Telescope
Photograph of the night sky
highlighting our galaxy as the
hazy band of stars across the sky
Our location on one of
the spiral arms
Howdy Neighbor..
• The Andromeda Galaxy is our
nearest relative
• It contains roughly 100 trillion
stars
• Located 2,500,000 light-years
away
• 220,000 light-years in diameter
• It is approaching us at roughly
140 km/s and we will collide in
about 2.5 billion years to
possibly form one giant galaxy
Infrared Image of Andromeda Galaxy taken by the Spitzer Space Telescope
©John Lanoue
Twinkle, Twinkly little star…
• Space is thinly filled with gas (H2 & He)
and dust ( carbon & silicon) called
interstellar medium
• In some places the gas and dust collect
into large clouds called nebula- the
birthplace of stars
• The nebula contains pockets of higher
gravity that cause the matter to clump
together, the clumps get bigger and
bigger in a process called accretion
• The continued process of accretion will
eventually form a protostar
• The functional life of a star is complicated
balancing act between the gravity pulling
atoms inward and the physical forces
pushing heat and light away from the
center
• When equilibrium is first reached the star
ignites-
▫ if because of temperatures it fails to ignite
it becomes known as a brown dwarf
▫ If it does ignite, nuclear fusion begins to
happen and the star is born
Eagle Nebula-Pillars of Creation Star Forming Region of Doradu
Nebula
Turbulent Gases in the Omega/ Swan
Nebula
The Orion Nebula
http://hubblesite.org
• A star spend the majority of its life in what
is known as the main sequence- where it
constantly fuses hydrogen into helium
• Stars constantly contract during their life,
about 50 million years for a medium size
star, increasing the temperature and
pressure inside the star to compensate for
the loss of heat and energy
The Death of a Star
• Once the hydrogen fuel source in the core
is gone it will start burning helium.
• The outer shell will burn the last bits of
hydrogen causing the outer shell to
expand aiding in the release of heat from
the core creating a red giant
•
Supernova of a star first seen in
1987 by the Hubble Telescope
• The expanding gases will then be cast off
producing one of the following
▫ Small stars- white dwarf ( size of Earth)
and a planetary nebular
▫ Medium stars – supernova producing a
neutron star( size of a city)
▫ Large stars – form black holes
• It is the death of stars that is responsible
for the creation of the heavier elements
White Dwarf in the center of a
planetary nebula, the result of the
death of a smaller star, like ours
http://sunshine.chpc.utah.edu/
The Crab Nebula is a pulsar
wind nebula associated with
a 1054 BCE supernova
Another Trip Around the Sun
• From the nebula come not only stars but
also protoplanetary disks of gas and dust
• Our solar system might have formed from
the disruption caused by a nearby
supernova
• Accretion in this disks once again causes
the dust to pile up and it will start to
rotate around the solar center, the center
become the star and the outer bands form
planets
• The gravity of the disk pulls heavier
materials toward the center giving way to
rocky planets such as Earth, Venus and
Mars
• Lighter icy materials remained in the outer
reaches of the spiral forming the giant
planets like Jupiter
• From studying meteorites it is believed
that our solar system is 4.6 billion years
old
http://www.windows.ucar.edu
A diagram of our solar system
http://www.diagramofsolarsystem.com/
• Our Sun
▫ Age- 4.5 billion years old
▫ Distance from Earth-150,000,000 km
▫ Diameter-109x the size of Earth
▫ ( 1,390,000 km)
▫ Mass- 333,000x the mass of Earth
▫ Composition -73 % hydrogen, 25% helium, 2%
other ( carbon, iron, neon, nitrogen, silicon,
magnesium, sulfur)
The Inner Planets
• Terrestrial Planets
• Dense rocky compositions
• Few or no moons, no ring systems
• Silicate minerals form their crust
• Iron and nickel cores
• 3 of 4 have atmospheres ( Venus, Earth,
Mars) and weather patterns
• Mercury’s was blown off by stellar winds
Size comparison of the inner planets ( NASA)
Asteroid Belt
• Asteroid- small solar system bodies that
orbit the sun
• Located between the planets Mars and
Jupiter
• From a few feet to hundreds of miles wide
▫ It contains over 40,000 rocks over ½ mile
across
The asteroid belt
between Mars
and Jupiter
The Outer Planets
• Gas Giants
• Jupiter and Saturn consist of a large
amount of hydrogen and helium
• Uranus and Neptune possess a greater
proportion of ices ( frozen water,
ammonia, methane)
• All of the gas giants have ring systems but
only Saturn’s is observable from earth
The outer Jovian
Planets
BBC-Jupiter Explosion Video
The orbits of
the solar
system
Earth-Sun, Like peas in a pod
• The Earth’s orbit around the sun is called
a revolution, this revolution takes 365.26
days
• Hence every four years we have a leap
year to catch up
• The orbit is elliptical, causing our distance
from the sun to vary, and our energy from
the sun fluctuates by about 6%
Round and Round we go..
• On January 3rd
the Earth is closest to the
sun(147.3 million Km), this is called the
perihelion
• On July 4th
the Earth is the farthest from
the sun(152.1 million Km), this is called
the aphelion
• The average distance from the sun is
149.6 million Km
Earth’s Orbit
• There are two major events in the Earth’s
orbits- the solstice and the equinox
• The solstices occur in the winter (Dec
21/22) and in the summer (June 21/22)
• The equinoxes occur in the spring (Vernal,
March 20/21) and the fall (Autumnal,
Sept. 22/23)
• During the equinoxes there are 12 hours
of day/12 hours of night
• The summer solstice is the longest day of
the year
You spin me right round…
• The Earth rotates on an axis, and
imaginary line that runs through the poles
of the Earth
• Earth’s axis is not completely vertical, it is
tilted 23.5o
from perpendicular
• It is the relationship between Earth’s tilt
and its orbital revolution that creates the
seasons
http://www.physicalgeography.net/fundamentals/6h.html
Earth’s Orbit and the seasons
Summer Solstice Winter Solstice
Vernal and Autumnal Equinox
How the tilt of the Earth affects which hemisphere is
facing the sun
• Earth is actually closest to the sun in the
winter time, and furthest away in the
summer
• When it is summer in the northern
hemisphere then it is winter in the
southern hemisphere
Round and Round..
• The Earth rotates east to
west, or counter-
clockwise (when viewed
from the North Pole)
• The rotation of the Earth
takes approx. 24 hours
• Seasonal effects on the Earth
▫ Changes in solar altitude
▫ Changes in day length
▫ Changes in apparent solar intensity
▫ Changes in temperature
• Changes in the seasons are the most
extreme at the poles and minimized at the
equator
Light from the sun
• Solar Radiation is received in parallel rays of
energy
• Insolation- the measurement of solar energy
received on a given surface( Earth)
• Commonly expressed as the average
irradiance, W/ m2
or kWh/(m2
*day)
• Intensity of incoming solar radiation
(insolation) is related to angle of incidence.
Higher angles = higher intensity
• The sun irradiates 63,000,000 W/ m2
• Depending on distance and size of an
object, we can calculate the amount of
energy that we receive
A 1 mi sunbeam striking
the Earth at 90o
disperses
it energy over 1mi of
surface, while a sunbeam
striking at 30o
spreads the
energy over a surface
area of 2 miles
• At the top of the atmosphere- 1,366 W/
m2
of energy is received (2 billionths )
• Atmospheric phenomena such as clouds
and weather patterns affect the amount of
solar energy that reaches the surface
• Geographic location, time of day and
landscape can also affect the amount of
energy received
• Perpendicular locations receive roughly
1000 W/ m2
on a clear day
• Earth’s average insolation is 250 W/ m2
http://www.eoearth.org/article/Solar_radiation
Average solar
radiation
received in
the Us
Earth’s energy budget
• 30% of the sun’s energy is reflected by
the atmosphere and the surface
• 19 % is absorbed by the clouds and
atmosphere itself, an reradiated back into
space
• 51% of the energy is absorbed by the
landscape and oceans to warm it
• 70% of the total energy we receive is
reradiated back into space
• 0.023 % of that energy is used for
Photosynthesis to fuel the food chain
http://www.geology.wisc.edu/homepages/g100s2/public_html/Geologic_Time
Time after time
• The geologic time scale is broken up into
several pieces
▫ Eons ( 4 total, ½ billion years or more)
▫ Era (12 total, several hundred million
years)
▫ Periods (defines periods of life)
▫ Epochs( tens of million years)
▫ Age ( millions of years)
Time after time..
• Hadean Eon 4.6-4.0 BYA
▫ Formation of the Earth’s crust and
bombardment by comets and asteroids
• Archean Eon 4.0-2.5 BYA
▫ First life appears, plate tectonics
established, oxygen poor atmosphere
• Proterozoic Eon 2.5 BYA – 542MYA
▫ First multicellular animals toward the end, 4
major mountain building episodes
(orogeny) [ Grenville & Pan-African] and
the oldest known and most severe
glaciation event
• Phanerozoic Eon 542 MYA-present
• Paleozoic Era 542-252MYA
▫ Cambrian Period- Began with the
Cambrian explosion, first skeletonized
animals
▫ Ordovician Period- ended with a mass
extinction
▫ Silurian Period-estuarine, freshwater and
terrestrial ecosystems developm, major
terrestrial life
▫ Devonian Period- age of fishes, first land
vertebrates, diversification of the vascular
plants
▫ Mississippian Period-first terrestrial
tetrapods
▫ Pennsylvanian Period-”coal age”-major
plant fossils that make up the major coal
seams
▫ Permian Period- the end of this era is
marked by the most extensive mass
extinction in the past 600 million years
rise of dinosaurs and modern critters, lots
of insects, major dominance of coniferous
plants
• Mesozoic Era 252-65.5 MYA
▫ Triassic Period –recovery from previous
mass extinction, rise of the dinosaurs, early
mammals, first coral reefs
▫ Jurassic Period – “Age of the Dinosaurs”,
first birds(aves), first parasites
▫ Cretaceous Period- extinction of the
dinosaurs, birth of the angiosperms
• Cenozoic Era 65.5MYA – present
• Paleogene Period
▫ Paleocene Epoch – “Age of Mammals”
begins, seeded vascular plants dominant
▫ Eocene Epoch –maximum extent or warm
and tropical vegetation, evolution of marine
mammals
▫ Oligocene Epoch- appearance of most of
the still living mammal families
• Neogene Period
▫ Miocene Epoch – most of the extant
marine invertebrates exist, major ocean
circulations form, seasonal climates
dominate the north hemisphere
▫ Pleistocene Epoch- human geographic
expansion and cultural development, first
major human-influenced extinctions
▫ Halocene Epoch- present day- climate
warming following the last ice age,
continents drying out, polar regions
contract, plant communities change with
climate
http://paleobiology.si.edu/geotime/main/
Welcome to Earth, third rock
from the sun..
• Earth is the fifth largest planet and the
largest terrestrial planet
• The shape of the Earth is an oblate
spheroid-”squished ball”
• The diameter across the equator is 43 km
larger than the pole to pole diameter
▫ Diameter is roughly 12,742km
• Mass = 5.98 x1024
kg
Tidal forces that cause the planet to be an oblate spheroid
• Chemical composition-
▫ 32.1 % Iron
▫ 30.1 % Oxygen
▫ 15.1 % Silicon
▫ 13.9 % Magnesium
▫ 2.9 % Sulfur
▫ 1.8 % Nickel
▫ 1.5% Calcium
▫ 1.4% Aluminum
▫ 1.2% Other trace elements
• The Earth has several layers
▫ The Crust- the hard outer shell
 Thin and floating on molten mantle
(Lithosphere)
 Two main types Oceanic (6-11km) and
Continental (30 km)
 Broken up into several large plates called
tectonic plates
▫ The Mantle
 Begins between 10-30km below the crust
 2,900km thick, 80% of the Earth’s Volume
 Divided into the inner and outer mantle
 Outer mantle (10-300km) 1,400 - 3,000o
C
 Molten rock, part closest to crust is thicker and
slower moving, plastic-like consistency
(Asthenosphere)
 Inner mantle (300-2,890km), 3000o
C
• The Core
• Found 2,900km below the surface
• Dense ball of iron and nickel
• Two layers
• Outer core-molten metal, 2,200km thick
-Rotates around the inner
core and creates Earth’s
Magnetic field
• Inner core- solid due to pressures, even
though its 3,700o
C , 1,250km thick
http://mediatheek.thinkquest.nl/~ll125/en/struct.htm
http://www.seismo.unr.edu/ftp/pub/louie/class/100/interior.html
• The Earth is also divided up into four
spheres
▫ Biosphere, Lithosphere, Hydrosphere and
the Atmosphere
• Lithosphere-”rocky sphere” the
outermost portion that provides a platform
for life, contains the crust and the
uppermost portion of the mantle
▫ The asthenosphere is located just
underneath- moves the tectonic plates
• Hydrosphere-”water sphere” the liquid
realm of the Earth, principally the mass of
water in the worlds oceans
▫ 70% of the surface is covered with water
▫ 366.3 trillion gallons
• Biosphere-” Life sphere” Most of the
biosphere is contained within a thin layer
of the planet called the life layer
▫ Overlaps with all of the other spheres
▫ 2200-4000 Gigatons of Biomass (2.2-4
Trillion tons)
• Atmosphere-” Air sphere” The gaseous
layer that surrounds the Earth. It supplies
some of the basic features that support
and sustain life on this planet
▫ 4 Major layers, 99% is Nitrogen and
Oxygen
http://ga.water.usgs.gov/edu/mearth.html
Mapping our planet..
• The Equator divides the world into
Northern and Southern Hemispheres
• Latitude-angular measurement of the
distance north or south of the Equator
▫ Range: 0-90o
N or S
▫ 1o
is roughly 69 miles on the surface
• Parallels of Latitude - Imaginary lines that
connect points of equal latitude, thus
slicing the earth into equal “layers” like on
a wedding cake
Important Parallels
• The Prime Meridian divides the world into
eastern and western hemispheres
• Longitude the angular measurement of
distance east or west of the Prime
Meridian or Greenwich Meridian.
▫ Range: 0-180o
E or W
Geographic Grid
• The combination of longitude and latitude
that makes every point on this Earth
easily identifiable and locatable
World Address of Major Cities
Berlin, Germany
Beijing, China
Paris, France
Moscow, Russia
London, England
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
World Address of Major Cities
Berlin, Germany -52.9o
N 12.5o
E
Beijing, China – 39.95o
N 116.5o
E
Paris, France – 48.8o
N 2.25o
E
Moscow, Russia – 55.8o
N 37.6o
E
London, England – 51.5o
N 0.1o
W
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil - 22.95o
S 43.2o
W
Map Projections
• Mapping the surface of the Earth is
difficult because it is round and maps are
typically flat
• 3 major types of map projections are used
▫ Conic
▫ Cylindrical/Mercator
▫ Azimuthal
• Conic Projections
▫ Good for northern/ southern locations
distorts near the edges-equator
• Mercator Projections
▫ Good for equatorial locations but distorts
near the poles
• Azimuthal /Planar
▫ Limited scope or area covered, but
preserved the ideas of direction on the map
River Deep, Mountain High
• Geomorphology-the scientific study of
landforms and the processes that shape
them
Water, water everywhere..
• Oceans
▫ Arctic Ocean
 Smallest and most shallow, Partially covered
in sea ice, temp and salinity vary, least salty
of all oceans
▫ Atlantic Ocean
 Second largest, 25% of water area, currently
growing, Divided into north and south Atlantic
by equator
▫ Indian Ocean
 Third largest, 20% of water area, begins at
the 20o
E meridian
▫ Pacific Ocean
 Divided up into the north and south pacific
 Largest ocean, and deepest ocean
 Currently shrinking
▫ Southern/ Antarctic Ocean
 Fourth largest ocean, completely surrounds
Antarctica
• Sea of Okhotsk
• Sea of Japan
• Hudson Bay
• East China
• Andaman
• Black Sea
• Red Sea
• South China Sea
• Caribbean Sea
• Mediterranean Sea
• Bering Sea
• Gulf of Mexico
• Arabian sea
Major Seas
http://www.worldatlas.com/aatlas/newart/locator/majorsea.htm
Major Mountain Ranges
• Himalayas
▫ Highest mountain range, “land of snow”,
located in southern Asia, between India and
southern Asia, one of the youngest mtn
ranges- Mt Everest- 29,029ft tall
• Alps
▫ Located in south central Europe, one of the
largest and highest mtn ranges, 750 miles
long- Mont Blanc 15.771 ft
• Andes
▫ Located in South America, runs north to south
along western edge of continent
• Rockies
▫ Vast system in western North America,
stretches from Canada to New Mexico, about
3000 miles long-Mount Elbert-14,440 ft
Mtn Ranges by Continent (don’t copy)
• Antarctica:
▫ Antarctic Peninsula,
Transantarctic Mountains
▫ The highest mountain,
Vinson Massif in the
Ellsworth Mountains,
peaks at 4897 m.
• Africa:
▫ Atlas, Eastern African
Highlands, Ethiopian
Highlands
• Asia:
▫ Hindu Kush, Himalayas,
Taurus, Elburz, Japanese
Mountains
• Australia:
▫ MacDonnell Mountains
• Europe:
▫ Pyrenees, Alps,
Carpathians, Apennines,
Urals, Balkan Mountains
• North America:
▫ Appalachians, Sierra
Nevada, Rocky
Mountains, Laurentides
• South America:
▫ Andes, Brazilian
Highlands
Appalachian Mountains
Rocky Mountains
The Alps
Himalayan Mountains
Mt. Everest 29,029 ft / 8,848 m
Major River Systems
• North American
▫ St Lawrence-2350 mi long, follows a fault
line and drains the Great Lakes
▫ Rio Grande
▫ Colorado- 1450 miles long, cut the largest
canyon system in the world including the
Grand Canyon
▫ Hudson- 315 mi long, serves New York and
can be navigated beyond the mtns
▫ Mississippi River – 3,870 miles long, 1.25
million mi2 drainage, longest river flowing
southward, 25 major cities located on it
banks
• North Carolina
North Carolina River Basins
• South America
▫ Amazon – 3,920 miles long, 2.3 mi2
drainage, largest basin in the world,
greatest flow (180,000 m3)
• African
▫ Nile- 4,180 mi long, 1.7 million mi2
drainage, White and Blue Nile tributaries,
Egyptians Agricultural is dependent upon
seasonal flooding, flows north
▫ Congo – 2900 mi long, 1.4 mil mi2
drainage, longest river flowing westward,
crosses the equator twice
▫ Zambezi – 2,200 mi long, 548,000 mi2
drainage, flows over Victoria falls
• Asian
▫ Tiger & Euphrates -1795 mi long, home
of ancient Mesopotamia, serves major Iraqi
cities
▫ Yangtze (Chang Jiang) – 3964 mi
long,698,000 mi2 drainage, the lifeline of
China
▫ Yellow (Huang He) -3,395 miles long,
290,000 mi2 drainage, some of the river is
higher than the surrounding area
▫ Ganges- 1560 mi long, sacred river of
India
• European
▫ Danube – 1,176 mi long, 320,000 mi2
drainage
▫ Rhine- 820 mi long, commercially the most
important river of Europe
Structure of a Watershed
System- Hydrology
• Inside the geographic divide, all of the
water in an area will eventually flow into
one river channel
• The very small streams that first collect
water at the source of the river are called
headwaters
• Headwater tributaries are ranked by size,
1st
order are the smallest, when they
combine they form 2nd
order streams, that
will eventually come together and form 3rd
order streams, so on and so on…
• Rivers channels are typically made up of
a stream bed, with banks on either side,
outside of the river banks are called flood
plains
• The edge of the floodplain where the
land and the stream meet is called a
riparian zone or area
• It is usually lined with riparian
vegetation, characterized by hydrophilic
plants.
• These areas are important because they
help prevent erosion, aiding in soil
conservation. This is because they buffer
the effects of fast moving flood waters
Braided River, multiple channels, New
ZealandMeanders of the Rio Cuato
Formation of an Oxbow
Lake
• Where the water pours out of a river
channel into a larger body of water is
called a delta
• The delta is where all of the sediment that
is suspended in a stream dumps out, as
the water slows
Mississippi River Delta
Migration of
the Mississippi
river channel
and Delta
Amazon River Delta
Types of Rivers
▫ Youthful Rivers
 A river with steep gradient, few tributaries
and a rapid flow, the channel is usually deep
and narrow
▫ Mature Rivers
 Less steep gradient, flows more slowly. Many
tributaries and higher discharge. Channel
becomes wider with time
▫ Old Rivers
 River with a low gradient and very little
erosion, usually have extensive flood plains
▫ Rejuvenated Rivers
 A river that has be lifted by tectonic uplift
Plate Tectonics
• Theory was developed to explain large
scale motions of Earth’s lithosphere
• Developed by Alfred Wegener
• Very important because it maintains the
balance of carbon in the environment
• Earth’s crust is broken up into several
major plates(7-8) and various secondary
plates
• Continental Drift + Sea Floor Spreading +
data = Theory of Plate Tectonics
Tectonic Plate boundaries marked by volcanic and seismic activity
Evidence for Plate Tectonics
• Puzzle like fit of the continents
• Fossil Distribution, Geologic similarities on
opposing shores
• Sea-Floor Polarity patterns
• Age of sea floor
Similarities of Geological Formation
• The lithospheric plates ride around on the
asthenosphere- plastic-like layer of the
upper mantle
• Plates interact with one another at 1 of 3
types of plate boundaries
▫ Convergent –collision boundaries where
plates move toward each other
▫ Divergent –where the plates are moving
away from one another
▫ Transform boundaries- where plates slide
past each other, side to side
Plate Boundaries
• Convergent Boundaries
▫ Ocean-Ocean
 one plate(typically the older one) will subduct
under the other volcanic island arc
▫ Ocean-Continental
 The oceanic plate will subduct under the
continental plate melt volcanic arc &
trench
▫ Continental-Continental
 Neither plate will subduct plates begin to
fold and crumble  mountain ranges
Mariana Trench – deepest part of
the world’s oceans
2550 km long, 70 km wide
Challenger Deep
11,033 meters deep (36,000 ft)
If Mt. Everest was set in the bottom
it would be covered by 6000 ft of
water

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AP Environmental Science Earth Systems

  • 2.
  • 3. In the beginning…. • Our Universe began as a very hot, very dense cloud of high energy hydrogen plasma • The “Big Bang” is the finite point, 13.7 BYA when for some reason the universe started to expand in all directions • The universe has expanded and cooled ever since this point
  • 4. • In the first microseconds after the big bang, elementary particles (quarks and leptons) dominated the universe independently • As the universe cooled, layer upon layer of structure began to form, first neutrons and protons atomic nuclei  atoms stars  galaxies  galaxy clusters • Our universe is now populated by an estimated 100 billion galaxies, each with 100 billion stars each of those having planets orbiting
  • 5. How do we know, why do we think.. • 1) We know that the universe is expanding ▫ By looking at the color of distance stars we can tell whether they are approaching or receeding ▫ If the color of the star appears blue (blueshift) then the star is approaching earth, shortening the wavelengths of light turning it blue
  • 6. • If the color appears red(redshift) then the distance between us and the star is increasing stretching the wavelengths of light shifting them toward the longer red wavelengths • The further the distance between us and the star the greater the redshift because they are travelling at higher speeds (Edwin Hubble,1929) • This is known as a Doppler wobble or Doppler shift
  • 8. • 2)Helium and Deuterium is universally abundant, and predates the formation of stars. ▫ The only things today beside nuclear bombs that can create these elements are stars • 3) Cosmic Background Radiation ▫ When looking at the sky with a radio telescope, there is a universal “glow” of microwaves the blankets the universe. ▫ The uniformity indicates one original source of the radiation, the big bang http://www.ugcs.caltech.edu/~yukimoon/BigBang/BigBang.htm
  • 9. Temperature variations of the cosmic background radiation as measured by WMAP ( difference between colors is 0.0002 Kelvin, average temperature 2.75 Kelvin) http://faculty.washington.edu/
  • 10. Home Sweet Home in the Milky Way • The Milky Way is a barred spiral galaxy • 100,000 light years in diameter • 1000 light years in thickness • 100 -400 billion stars • Oldest star is 13.2 BYO • We are located 26,000 light years from the galactic center • We are spiraling at roughly 552km/s
  • 11. Infrared image of the center of the Milky Way Galaxy taken by the Spitzer Space Telescope
  • 12. Photograph of the night sky highlighting our galaxy as the hazy band of stars across the sky Our location on one of the spiral arms
  • 13. Howdy Neighbor.. • The Andromeda Galaxy is our nearest relative • It contains roughly 100 trillion stars • Located 2,500,000 light-years away • 220,000 light-years in diameter • It is approaching us at roughly 140 km/s and we will collide in about 2.5 billion years to possibly form one giant galaxy
  • 14. Infrared Image of Andromeda Galaxy taken by the Spitzer Space Telescope ©John Lanoue
  • 15. Twinkle, Twinkly little star… • Space is thinly filled with gas (H2 & He) and dust ( carbon & silicon) called interstellar medium • In some places the gas and dust collect into large clouds called nebula- the birthplace of stars • The nebula contains pockets of higher gravity that cause the matter to clump together, the clumps get bigger and bigger in a process called accretion
  • 16. • The continued process of accretion will eventually form a protostar • The functional life of a star is complicated balancing act between the gravity pulling atoms inward and the physical forces pushing heat and light away from the center • When equilibrium is first reached the star ignites- ▫ if because of temperatures it fails to ignite it becomes known as a brown dwarf ▫ If it does ignite, nuclear fusion begins to happen and the star is born
  • 17. Eagle Nebula-Pillars of Creation Star Forming Region of Doradu Nebula
  • 18. Turbulent Gases in the Omega/ Swan Nebula The Orion Nebula http://hubblesite.org
  • 19. • A star spend the majority of its life in what is known as the main sequence- where it constantly fuses hydrogen into helium • Stars constantly contract during their life, about 50 million years for a medium size star, increasing the temperature and pressure inside the star to compensate for the loss of heat and energy
  • 20. The Death of a Star • Once the hydrogen fuel source in the core is gone it will start burning helium. • The outer shell will burn the last bits of hydrogen causing the outer shell to expand aiding in the release of heat from the core creating a red giant • Supernova of a star first seen in 1987 by the Hubble Telescope
  • 21. • The expanding gases will then be cast off producing one of the following ▫ Small stars- white dwarf ( size of Earth) and a planetary nebular ▫ Medium stars – supernova producing a neutron star( size of a city) ▫ Large stars – form black holes • It is the death of stars that is responsible for the creation of the heavier elements White Dwarf in the center of a planetary nebula, the result of the death of a smaller star, like ours http://sunshine.chpc.utah.edu/
  • 22. The Crab Nebula is a pulsar wind nebula associated with a 1054 BCE supernova
  • 23.
  • 24. Another Trip Around the Sun • From the nebula come not only stars but also protoplanetary disks of gas and dust • Our solar system might have formed from the disruption caused by a nearby supernova • Accretion in this disks once again causes the dust to pile up and it will start to rotate around the solar center, the center become the star and the outer bands form planets
  • 25. • The gravity of the disk pulls heavier materials toward the center giving way to rocky planets such as Earth, Venus and Mars • Lighter icy materials remained in the outer reaches of the spiral forming the giant planets like Jupiter • From studying meteorites it is believed that our solar system is 4.6 billion years old http://www.windows.ucar.edu
  • 26. A diagram of our solar system http://www.diagramofsolarsystem.com/
  • 27. • Our Sun ▫ Age- 4.5 billion years old ▫ Distance from Earth-150,000,000 km ▫ Diameter-109x the size of Earth ▫ ( 1,390,000 km) ▫ Mass- 333,000x the mass of Earth ▫ Composition -73 % hydrogen, 25% helium, 2% other ( carbon, iron, neon, nitrogen, silicon, magnesium, sulfur)
  • 28. The Inner Planets • Terrestrial Planets • Dense rocky compositions • Few or no moons, no ring systems • Silicate minerals form their crust • Iron and nickel cores • 3 of 4 have atmospheres ( Venus, Earth, Mars) and weather patterns • Mercury’s was blown off by stellar winds
  • 29. Size comparison of the inner planets ( NASA)
  • 30. Asteroid Belt • Asteroid- small solar system bodies that orbit the sun • Located between the planets Mars and Jupiter • From a few feet to hundreds of miles wide ▫ It contains over 40,000 rocks over ½ mile across
  • 31. The asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter
  • 32. The Outer Planets • Gas Giants • Jupiter and Saturn consist of a large amount of hydrogen and helium • Uranus and Neptune possess a greater proportion of ices ( frozen water, ammonia, methane) • All of the gas giants have ring systems but only Saturn’s is observable from earth
  • 34. The orbits of the solar system
  • 35.
  • 36. Earth-Sun, Like peas in a pod • The Earth’s orbit around the sun is called a revolution, this revolution takes 365.26 days • Hence every four years we have a leap year to catch up • The orbit is elliptical, causing our distance from the sun to vary, and our energy from the sun fluctuates by about 6%
  • 37. Round and Round we go.. • On January 3rd the Earth is closest to the sun(147.3 million Km), this is called the perihelion • On July 4th the Earth is the farthest from the sun(152.1 million Km), this is called the aphelion • The average distance from the sun is 149.6 million Km
  • 39. • There are two major events in the Earth’s orbits- the solstice and the equinox • The solstices occur in the winter (Dec 21/22) and in the summer (June 21/22) • The equinoxes occur in the spring (Vernal, March 20/21) and the fall (Autumnal, Sept. 22/23) • During the equinoxes there are 12 hours of day/12 hours of night • The summer solstice is the longest day of the year
  • 40. You spin me right round… • The Earth rotates on an axis, and imaginary line that runs through the poles of the Earth • Earth’s axis is not completely vertical, it is tilted 23.5o from perpendicular • It is the relationship between Earth’s tilt and its orbital revolution that creates the seasons http://www.physicalgeography.net/fundamentals/6h.html
  • 41.
  • 42. Earth’s Orbit and the seasons Summer Solstice Winter Solstice
  • 44. How the tilt of the Earth affects which hemisphere is facing the sun
  • 45. • Earth is actually closest to the sun in the winter time, and furthest away in the summer • When it is summer in the northern hemisphere then it is winter in the southern hemisphere
  • 46. Round and Round.. • The Earth rotates east to west, or counter- clockwise (when viewed from the North Pole) • The rotation of the Earth takes approx. 24 hours
  • 47. • Seasonal effects on the Earth ▫ Changes in solar altitude ▫ Changes in day length ▫ Changes in apparent solar intensity ▫ Changes in temperature • Changes in the seasons are the most extreme at the poles and minimized at the equator
  • 48.
  • 49. Light from the sun • Solar Radiation is received in parallel rays of energy • Insolation- the measurement of solar energy received on a given surface( Earth) • Commonly expressed as the average irradiance, W/ m2 or kWh/(m2 *day) • Intensity of incoming solar radiation (insolation) is related to angle of incidence. Higher angles = higher intensity
  • 50. • The sun irradiates 63,000,000 W/ m2 • Depending on distance and size of an object, we can calculate the amount of energy that we receive
  • 51. A 1 mi sunbeam striking the Earth at 90o disperses it energy over 1mi of surface, while a sunbeam striking at 30o spreads the energy over a surface area of 2 miles
  • 52. • At the top of the atmosphere- 1,366 W/ m2 of energy is received (2 billionths ) • Atmospheric phenomena such as clouds and weather patterns affect the amount of solar energy that reaches the surface • Geographic location, time of day and landscape can also affect the amount of energy received • Perpendicular locations receive roughly 1000 W/ m2 on a clear day • Earth’s average insolation is 250 W/ m2 http://www.eoearth.org/article/Solar_radiation
  • 54.
  • 55. Earth’s energy budget • 30% of the sun’s energy is reflected by the atmosphere and the surface • 19 % is absorbed by the clouds and atmosphere itself, an reradiated back into space • 51% of the energy is absorbed by the landscape and oceans to warm it • 70% of the total energy we receive is reradiated back into space • 0.023 % of that energy is used for Photosynthesis to fuel the food chain
  • 56.
  • 57.
  • 59. Time after time • The geologic time scale is broken up into several pieces ▫ Eons ( 4 total, ½ billion years or more) ▫ Era (12 total, several hundred million years) ▫ Periods (defines periods of life) ▫ Epochs( tens of million years) ▫ Age ( millions of years)
  • 60.
  • 61.
  • 62.
  • 63.
  • 64. Time after time.. • Hadean Eon 4.6-4.0 BYA ▫ Formation of the Earth’s crust and bombardment by comets and asteroids • Archean Eon 4.0-2.5 BYA ▫ First life appears, plate tectonics established, oxygen poor atmosphere • Proterozoic Eon 2.5 BYA – 542MYA ▫ First multicellular animals toward the end, 4 major mountain building episodes (orogeny) [ Grenville & Pan-African] and the oldest known and most severe glaciation event
  • 65. • Phanerozoic Eon 542 MYA-present • Paleozoic Era 542-252MYA ▫ Cambrian Period- Began with the Cambrian explosion, first skeletonized animals ▫ Ordovician Period- ended with a mass extinction ▫ Silurian Period-estuarine, freshwater and terrestrial ecosystems developm, major terrestrial life ▫ Devonian Period- age of fishes, first land vertebrates, diversification of the vascular plants
  • 66. ▫ Mississippian Period-first terrestrial tetrapods ▫ Pennsylvanian Period-”coal age”-major plant fossils that make up the major coal seams ▫ Permian Period- the end of this era is marked by the most extensive mass extinction in the past 600 million years rise of dinosaurs and modern critters, lots of insects, major dominance of coniferous plants
  • 67. • Mesozoic Era 252-65.5 MYA ▫ Triassic Period –recovery from previous mass extinction, rise of the dinosaurs, early mammals, first coral reefs ▫ Jurassic Period – “Age of the Dinosaurs”, first birds(aves), first parasites ▫ Cretaceous Period- extinction of the dinosaurs, birth of the angiosperms
  • 68. • Cenozoic Era 65.5MYA – present • Paleogene Period ▫ Paleocene Epoch – “Age of Mammals” begins, seeded vascular plants dominant ▫ Eocene Epoch –maximum extent or warm and tropical vegetation, evolution of marine mammals ▫ Oligocene Epoch- appearance of most of the still living mammal families
  • 69. • Neogene Period ▫ Miocene Epoch – most of the extant marine invertebrates exist, major ocean circulations form, seasonal climates dominate the north hemisphere ▫ Pleistocene Epoch- human geographic expansion and cultural development, first major human-influenced extinctions ▫ Halocene Epoch- present day- climate warming following the last ice age, continents drying out, polar regions contract, plant communities change with climate http://paleobiology.si.edu/geotime/main/
  • 70.
  • 71. Welcome to Earth, third rock from the sun.. • Earth is the fifth largest planet and the largest terrestrial planet • The shape of the Earth is an oblate spheroid-”squished ball” • The diameter across the equator is 43 km larger than the pole to pole diameter ▫ Diameter is roughly 12,742km • Mass = 5.98 x1024 kg
  • 72. Tidal forces that cause the planet to be an oblate spheroid
  • 73. • Chemical composition- ▫ 32.1 % Iron ▫ 30.1 % Oxygen ▫ 15.1 % Silicon ▫ 13.9 % Magnesium ▫ 2.9 % Sulfur ▫ 1.8 % Nickel ▫ 1.5% Calcium ▫ 1.4% Aluminum ▫ 1.2% Other trace elements
  • 74.
  • 75. • The Earth has several layers ▫ The Crust- the hard outer shell  Thin and floating on molten mantle (Lithosphere)  Two main types Oceanic (6-11km) and Continental (30 km)  Broken up into several large plates called tectonic plates ▫ The Mantle  Begins between 10-30km below the crust  2,900km thick, 80% of the Earth’s Volume  Divided into the inner and outer mantle
  • 76.  Outer mantle (10-300km) 1,400 - 3,000o C  Molten rock, part closest to crust is thicker and slower moving, plastic-like consistency (Asthenosphere)  Inner mantle (300-2,890km), 3000o C • The Core • Found 2,900km below the surface • Dense ball of iron and nickel • Two layers • Outer core-molten metal, 2,200km thick -Rotates around the inner core and creates Earth’s Magnetic field • Inner core- solid due to pressures, even though its 3,700o C , 1,250km thick http://mediatheek.thinkquest.nl/~ll125/en/struct.htm
  • 77.
  • 79.
  • 80. • The Earth is also divided up into four spheres ▫ Biosphere, Lithosphere, Hydrosphere and the Atmosphere
  • 81. • Lithosphere-”rocky sphere” the outermost portion that provides a platform for life, contains the crust and the uppermost portion of the mantle ▫ The asthenosphere is located just underneath- moves the tectonic plates • Hydrosphere-”water sphere” the liquid realm of the Earth, principally the mass of water in the worlds oceans ▫ 70% of the surface is covered with water ▫ 366.3 trillion gallons
  • 82. • Biosphere-” Life sphere” Most of the biosphere is contained within a thin layer of the planet called the life layer ▫ Overlaps with all of the other spheres ▫ 2200-4000 Gigatons of Biomass (2.2-4 Trillion tons) • Atmosphere-” Air sphere” The gaseous layer that surrounds the Earth. It supplies some of the basic features that support and sustain life on this planet ▫ 4 Major layers, 99% is Nitrogen and Oxygen http://ga.water.usgs.gov/edu/mearth.html
  • 83. Mapping our planet.. • The Equator divides the world into Northern and Southern Hemispheres • Latitude-angular measurement of the distance north or south of the Equator ▫ Range: 0-90o N or S ▫ 1o is roughly 69 miles on the surface • Parallels of Latitude - Imaginary lines that connect points of equal latitude, thus slicing the earth into equal “layers” like on a wedding cake
  • 84.
  • 86. • The Prime Meridian divides the world into eastern and western hemispheres • Longitude the angular measurement of distance east or west of the Prime Meridian or Greenwich Meridian. ▫ Range: 0-180o E or W
  • 87.
  • 88.
  • 89. Geographic Grid • The combination of longitude and latitude that makes every point on this Earth easily identifiable and locatable
  • 90. World Address of Major Cities Berlin, Germany Beijing, China Paris, France Moscow, Russia London, England Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
  • 91. World Address of Major Cities Berlin, Germany -52.9o N 12.5o E Beijing, China – 39.95o N 116.5o E Paris, France – 48.8o N 2.25o E Moscow, Russia – 55.8o N 37.6o E London, England – 51.5o N 0.1o W Rio de Janeiro, Brazil - 22.95o S 43.2o W
  • 92. Map Projections • Mapping the surface of the Earth is difficult because it is round and maps are typically flat • 3 major types of map projections are used ▫ Conic ▫ Cylindrical/Mercator ▫ Azimuthal
  • 93.
  • 94.
  • 95. • Conic Projections ▫ Good for northern/ southern locations distorts near the edges-equator • Mercator Projections ▫ Good for equatorial locations but distorts near the poles • Azimuthal /Planar ▫ Limited scope or area covered, but preserved the ideas of direction on the map
  • 96.
  • 97. River Deep, Mountain High • Geomorphology-the scientific study of landforms and the processes that shape them
  • 98. Water, water everywhere.. • Oceans ▫ Arctic Ocean  Smallest and most shallow, Partially covered in sea ice, temp and salinity vary, least salty of all oceans ▫ Atlantic Ocean  Second largest, 25% of water area, currently growing, Divided into north and south Atlantic by equator ▫ Indian Ocean  Third largest, 20% of water area, begins at the 20o E meridian
  • 99. ▫ Pacific Ocean  Divided up into the north and south pacific  Largest ocean, and deepest ocean  Currently shrinking ▫ Southern/ Antarctic Ocean  Fourth largest ocean, completely surrounds Antarctica
  • 100.
  • 101. • Sea of Okhotsk • Sea of Japan • Hudson Bay • East China • Andaman • Black Sea • Red Sea • South China Sea • Caribbean Sea • Mediterranean Sea • Bering Sea • Gulf of Mexico • Arabian sea Major Seas
  • 103. Major Mountain Ranges • Himalayas ▫ Highest mountain range, “land of snow”, located in southern Asia, between India and southern Asia, one of the youngest mtn ranges- Mt Everest- 29,029ft tall • Alps ▫ Located in south central Europe, one of the largest and highest mtn ranges, 750 miles long- Mont Blanc 15.771 ft
  • 104. • Andes ▫ Located in South America, runs north to south along western edge of continent • Rockies ▫ Vast system in western North America, stretches from Canada to New Mexico, about 3000 miles long-Mount Elbert-14,440 ft
  • 105. Mtn Ranges by Continent (don’t copy) • Antarctica: ▫ Antarctic Peninsula, Transantarctic Mountains ▫ The highest mountain, Vinson Massif in the Ellsworth Mountains, peaks at 4897 m. • Africa: ▫ Atlas, Eastern African Highlands, Ethiopian Highlands • Asia: ▫ Hindu Kush, Himalayas, Taurus, Elburz, Japanese Mountains • Australia: ▫ MacDonnell Mountains • Europe: ▫ Pyrenees, Alps, Carpathians, Apennines, Urals, Balkan Mountains
  • 106. • North America: ▫ Appalachians, Sierra Nevada, Rocky Mountains, Laurentides • South America: ▫ Andes, Brazilian Highlands
  • 107.
  • 108.
  • 110.
  • 112.
  • 114.
  • 116. Mt. Everest 29,029 ft / 8,848 m
  • 117.
  • 118. Major River Systems • North American ▫ St Lawrence-2350 mi long, follows a fault line and drains the Great Lakes ▫ Rio Grande ▫ Colorado- 1450 miles long, cut the largest canyon system in the world including the Grand Canyon ▫ Hudson- 315 mi long, serves New York and can be navigated beyond the mtns ▫ Mississippi River – 3,870 miles long, 1.25 million mi2 drainage, longest river flowing southward, 25 major cities located on it banks
  • 119.
  • 122.
  • 123. • South America ▫ Amazon – 3,920 miles long, 2.3 mi2 drainage, largest basin in the world, greatest flow (180,000 m3)
  • 124.
  • 125.
  • 126. • African ▫ Nile- 4,180 mi long, 1.7 million mi2 drainage, White and Blue Nile tributaries, Egyptians Agricultural is dependent upon seasonal flooding, flows north ▫ Congo – 2900 mi long, 1.4 mil mi2 drainage, longest river flowing westward, crosses the equator twice ▫ Zambezi – 2,200 mi long, 548,000 mi2 drainage, flows over Victoria falls
  • 127.
  • 128. • Asian ▫ Tiger & Euphrates -1795 mi long, home of ancient Mesopotamia, serves major Iraqi cities ▫ Yangtze (Chang Jiang) – 3964 mi long,698,000 mi2 drainage, the lifeline of China ▫ Yellow (Huang He) -3,395 miles long, 290,000 mi2 drainage, some of the river is higher than the surrounding area ▫ Ganges- 1560 mi long, sacred river of India
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  • 130.
  • 131. • European ▫ Danube – 1,176 mi long, 320,000 mi2 drainage ▫ Rhine- 820 mi long, commercially the most important river of Europe
  • 132.
  • 133. Structure of a Watershed System- Hydrology
  • 134.
  • 135. • Inside the geographic divide, all of the water in an area will eventually flow into one river channel • The very small streams that first collect water at the source of the river are called headwaters • Headwater tributaries are ranked by size, 1st order are the smallest, when they combine they form 2nd order streams, that will eventually come together and form 3rd order streams, so on and so on…
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  • 137.
  • 138.
  • 139. • Rivers channels are typically made up of a stream bed, with banks on either side, outside of the river banks are called flood plains • The edge of the floodplain where the land and the stream meet is called a riparian zone or area • It is usually lined with riparian vegetation, characterized by hydrophilic plants. • These areas are important because they help prevent erosion, aiding in soil conservation. This is because they buffer the effects of fast moving flood waters
  • 140. Braided River, multiple channels, New ZealandMeanders of the Rio Cuato
  • 141. Formation of an Oxbow Lake
  • 142. • Where the water pours out of a river channel into a larger body of water is called a delta • The delta is where all of the sediment that is suspended in a stream dumps out, as the water slows
  • 143.
  • 147. Types of Rivers ▫ Youthful Rivers  A river with steep gradient, few tributaries and a rapid flow, the channel is usually deep and narrow ▫ Mature Rivers  Less steep gradient, flows more slowly. Many tributaries and higher discharge. Channel becomes wider with time ▫ Old Rivers  River with a low gradient and very little erosion, usually have extensive flood plains ▫ Rejuvenated Rivers  A river that has be lifted by tectonic uplift
  • 148.
  • 149. Plate Tectonics • Theory was developed to explain large scale motions of Earth’s lithosphere • Developed by Alfred Wegener • Very important because it maintains the balance of carbon in the environment • Earth’s crust is broken up into several major plates(7-8) and various secondary plates • Continental Drift + Sea Floor Spreading + data = Theory of Plate Tectonics
  • 150.
  • 151. Tectonic Plate boundaries marked by volcanic and seismic activity
  • 152.
  • 153. Evidence for Plate Tectonics • Puzzle like fit of the continents • Fossil Distribution, Geologic similarities on opposing shores • Sea-Floor Polarity patterns • Age of sea floor
  • 154.
  • 155.
  • 157.
  • 158.
  • 159. • The lithospheric plates ride around on the asthenosphere- plastic-like layer of the upper mantle • Plates interact with one another at 1 of 3 types of plate boundaries ▫ Convergent –collision boundaries where plates move toward each other ▫ Divergent –where the plates are moving away from one another ▫ Transform boundaries- where plates slide past each other, side to side
  • 160.
  • 161. Plate Boundaries • Convergent Boundaries ▫ Ocean-Ocean  one plate(typically the older one) will subduct under the other volcanic island arc ▫ Ocean-Continental  The oceanic plate will subduct under the continental plate melt volcanic arc & trench ▫ Continental-Continental  Neither plate will subduct plates begin to fold and crumble  mountain ranges
  • 162.
  • 163. Mariana Trench – deepest part of the world’s oceans 2550 km long, 70 km wide Challenger Deep 11,033 meters deep (36,000 ft) If Mt. Everest was set in the bottom it would be covered by 6000 ft of water