Constructive Processes
Transcription
Constructive Processes
CONSTRUCTIVE PROCESSES Constructive processes build Earth’s surface up. These processes build up mountains and carve out valleys. They create many other kinds of landforms. CONSTRUCTIVE PROCESSES Volcanoes Deposition Earthquakes DEPOSITION Weathering breaks rock down into smaller pieces. Then erosion moves pieces of rock to new places. Wind and water carry the rock particles along. But when wind and flowing water slow down, they cannot carry as much material. They drop some or all of the rock particles they are carrying. Deposition is the dropping of material by water, wind, or glaciers. DEPOSITION - DELTA The moving water in a river slows near its mouth - the place where the river flows into the ocean or a lake. As the river slows, sand and soil in the water settle to the bottom. This sediment can build up and form a flat piece of land called a delta. A delta is usually shaped like a triangle or fan. Mississippi River Delta DISCUSSION QUESTION How do weathering, erosion, and deposition combine to form a river delta? DEPOSITION - FLOODPLAIN When rainfall is very heavy, a river may overflow its banks. Then water spreads out over the land on both sides of the river. The river slows down and drops the sediment it is carrying. The sediment forms a wide, flat area called a floodplain. FLOODPLAIN The Mississippi River flows along most of the western border of Mississippi. North of Vicksburg, there is a wide floodplain between the Mississippi River and the Yazoo River. The average width of the floodplain is 65 miles. DEPOSITION OF RIVER SEDIMENTS DEPOSITION - BEACH Ocean water deposits sediment. Beaches are the main feature formed on the shore. Much of the sand on beaches starts far inland. Rivers may carry it to the ocean, where it sinks to the bottom. But ocean waves wash some sand back on shore. Over thousands of years, beaches form. DEPOSITION DUNE A dune is a hill of sand deposited by wind. Dunes form along some ocean shores and in sandy deserts. Wind picks up grains of sand, but even a strong wind cannot carry sand very far. Wind blowing from the ocean toward land picks up sand along the shore and deposits it nearby. Sand dropped by wind starts to build up around rocks or plants on the shore. As the wind deposits more sand, dunes form. DUNES DEPOSITION GLACIERS Glaciers also deposit sediment. Recall that a glacier is a huge sheet of ice that moves slowly over land. As it moves, a glacier picks up rock and soil. When the glacier melts, it leaves this material behind. A moraine is a ridge of rock and soil deposited when a glacier melts. MORAINE EARTHQUAKES Earthquakes are destructive and can open wide cracks in the earth’s surface. But earthquakes can also build up areas of land. Most earthquakes happen when rock moves suddenly along a fault. A fault is a break in the rock that makes up earth’s crust. Pressure deep underground may push the land on one side of a fault upward. The result is a clifflike landform called a fault scarp. FAULT ANIMATIONS http://earthquake.usgs.gov/learn/animations/ animation.php?flash_title=Normal +Fault&flash_file=normalfault&flash_width=22 0&flash_height=320 http://earthquake.usgs.gov/learn/ animations/animation.php? flash_title=Thrust +Fault&flash_file=thrustfault&flash_width =220&flash_height=320 SAN ANDREAS FAULT http://www.exploratorium.edu/faultline/ http://www2.jpl.nasa.gov/srtm/images/ movies/san-andreas1.mov EARTHQUAKES Changes during an earthquake are fast. Rock can also move at faults much more slowly. Over millions of years, rock pushed up along faults can form tall mountain ranges. The Sierra Nevada Mountains in California formed in that way. VOLCANOES Volcanic eruptions also build up earth’s surface. When a volcano erupts hot, melted rock flows out of it. That melted rock underground is called magma. When it reaches the surface, it is called lava. On the surface, lava cools and hardens. It forms solid rock. As a volcano erupts over and over, the rock formed from lava piles up. Over a long time, it can form a mountain. Volcano Eruption Animation: http://www.10news.com/ weather/15844616/detail.html LAVA VIDEO CLIPS http://www.10news.com/weather/15844616/ detail.html MOUNT ST. HELENS VOLCANO CAMS http://www.fs.fed.us/gpnf/volcanocams/msh/ VOLCANOES VOLCANOES The islands that make up the state of Hawaii are mountains that formed around volcanoes on the ocean floor. Lava flowing from the volcanoes built up the mountains until they stuck out of the water. Some of the Hawaiian islands are still becoming larger, as the volcanoes continue to erupt. Formation of the Hawaiian Islands: http:// library.thinkquest.org/J003007/Disasters2/volcano/ formed/formed.htm EARTHQUAKES AND VOLCANOES DISCUSSION QUESTIONS What are some similarities between constructive and destructive processes? What are some differences between constructive and destructive processes? HOW MOUNTAINS ARE FORMED when plates crash together when plates lift at a fault volcanic eruptions - magma and lava erosion - high plateau, rivers carving deep channels (between river valleys) HOW V-SHAPED VALLEYS ARE FORMED formed by flowing water, normally a river HOW U-SHAPED VALLEYS ARE FORMED formed by glaciers