1 / 25

Chapter 1.1

Chapter 1.1. Branches of Earth Science Geology – study of the solid earth Most geologists specialize in a particular aspect of the Earth Volcanologist – studies volcanoes Paleontologist – studies fossils Some explore the oceans and underwater caves. Chapter 1.1.

adriannep
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 1.1

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 1.1 • Branches of Earth Science • Geology – study of the solid earth • Most geologists specialize in a particular aspect of the Earth • Volcanologist – studies volcanoes • Paleontologist – studies fossils • Some explore the oceans and underwater caves

  2. Chapter 1.1 • Oceanography – study of the ocean • Physical oceanographers study things like waves and ocean currents • Biological oceanographers study the plants and animals that live in the ocean • Geological oceanographers study natural chemicals and the chemicals from pollution in the ocean

  3. Chapter 1.1 • Black smokers are rock chimneys on the ocean floor that spew black clouds of minerals and are a type of hydrothermal vent (crack in the ocean floor) that releases very hot water and minerals • The minerals and the hot water from these vents support a biological community of blood red tube worms, clams, and blind white crabs

  4. Chapter 1.1 • Meteorology – study of the entire atmosphere • 2 of the major destructive weather events • Hurricanes • Tornadoes

  5. Chapter 1.1 • Astronomy – the study of all physical things beyond Earth • Study stars, asteroids, planets, and everything else in space

  6. Chapter 1.1 • Other branches of Earth Science that depend more heavily on other areas of science • Ecology – study the relationships between organisms and their surroundings • Geochemistry – specialize in rocks, minerals, and soils

  7. Chapter 1.1 • Special branches – cont’d • Environmental Science – how humans interact with the environment • Geography and Cartography – study the surface feature of the earth and make maps of those features

  8. Chapter 1.2 • Scientific method – a series of steps that is used to answer a question or solve a problem • Scientists may use all of the steps or just some of the steps of the scientific method • Sometimes only observations are needed to find an answer • Can the answer always be found?

  9. Chapter 1.2 • Form a hypothesis – a possible explanation or answer to a question • Scientists have to think logically and creatively and consider what they already know • Must be testable by experimentation • If a hypothesis is not testable, it does not mean that it is wrong, just that there is no way to support or disprove the hypothesis • Scientist make predictions about their hypothesis

  10. Chapter 1.2 • Test the hypothesis – scientists design experiments that will clearly show whether a particular factor caused an observed outcome • A factor is anything in an experiment that can influence the experiment’s outcome • Ex: temperature, size, watering amount, etc • Controlled experiment – tests only one factor at a time • Experimental experiment – factors are the same as the controlled, except for one factor • Variable – one factor that differs

  11. Chapter 1.2 • Test the hypothesis – cont’d • Collect data – • Scientists also support their conclusions by repeating their experiment • If an experiment produces the same results again and again, scientists can be more certain about the effect the variable has on the outcome of the experiment

  12. Chapter 1.2 • Analyze the results – they must organize the data so that they can be analyzed • They must put the data into a table or graph

  13. Chapter 1.2 • Draw conclusion – they decide whether the results of the experiments support a hypothesis • If the hypothesis is not supported by the tests, they must try to find another explanation for what they have observed • Communicate Results – scientists communicate their results with other scientists • Other scientists may repeat the experiments to see if they get the same results

  14. Chapter 1.3 • Global warming – worldwide increase in temperature • Is global warming happening? • Models – representations of objects or systems • Models of earth, solar system, etc

  15. Chapter 1.3 • Types of Models • 1. Physical models – models you can touch and should act and look just like the real thing • 2. Mathematical models – made up of mathematical equations and data • 3. Conceptual models – take the form of theories like the Big Bang and atomic theory

  16. Chapter 1.3 • Global-Warming Model – is the temperature of the earth increasing • Greenhouse effect – a greenhouse is made up of glass in which plants are grown • Has anyone been in a greenhouse???

  17. Chapter 1.3 • What is the temperature like in a greenhouse? • Testing the Global-Warming Model • What could we do to test it?

  18. Chapter 1.4 • Systems of measurement – scientists must be able to make accurate and reliable measurements • SI unit or International System of Units – most scientists and almost all countries use this system • Does the US use the SI system?

  19. Chapter 1.4 • Measuring length – meter is the basic unit of length in the SI system • Look at page 22 to see how the meter is divided up

  20. Chapter 1.4 • Measuring volume – amount of space that something occupies or contains • Is often measured in liters (L)

  21. Chapter 1.4 • Measuring volume of solids • Large solid object is given in cubic meters • Smaller objects are measured in cubic centimeters • Displacement of water is used to measure the volume of fossils and rocks with irregular shapes

  22. Chapter 1.4 • Temperature – a measure of how hot or cold something is • Measure in degrees Celsius or Kelvin • Does the US always use C or K

  23. Chapter 1.4 • Lab Safety Rules!!!

More Related