GeologyJeopardy

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Transcript GeologyJeopardy

Sara Kahl
Kutztown University - ITC 525
Summer Session I - 2011
Table of Contents
•Jeopardy
•Credits
•Corresponding Standards
Geology Jeopardy
Earthquakes
Continental
Drift
Changes
Mountains
Q $100
Q $100
Q $100
Q $100
Q $100
Q $200
Q $200
Q $200
Q $200
Q $200
Q $300
Q $300
Q $300
Q $300
Q $300
Q $400
Q $400
Q $400
Q $400
Q $400
Q $500
Q $500
Q $500
Q $500
Q $500
Volcanoes
Final Jeopardy
Changes for $100
Physical features on
Earth’s Surface that may
seem as if they never
change, but they do.
$100 Answer from Changes
What are landforms?
$200 Question from Changes
Flowing water, waves, wind, ice, and
movements inside the Earth all have
something in common.
$200 Answer from Changes
What are forces that change landforms?
$300 Question from Changes
The process of breaking rock into silt,
sand, clay, and other tiny pieces,
called sediment.
$300 Answer from Changes
What is weathering?
*Water is an important cause of
weathering.
Erosion & Weathering
Super Duo - Video
Clip
$400 Question from Changes
View the Following Video Clip.
Mudslides are a force that move wet
soil. This is an example of which type of
land changing force.
$400 Answer from Changes
What is mass movement?
$500 Question from Changes
Long Island and Cape Cod are examples of this result from
Glaciers melting and leaving behind long ridges of soil and
rock.
$500 Answer from Changes
What are terminal moraines?
$100 Question from Mountains
Earth’s highest landforms.
$100 Answer from Mountains
What are mountains?
$200 Question from Mountains
This is how mountains form.
$200 Answer from Mountains
What is crust folding, cracking, and
bending upwards because of the
movements of Earth’s plates?
$300 Question from Mountains
This is Earth’s highest mountain range.
$300 Answer from Mountains
What are the
Himalayas?
$400 Question from Mountains
Plates pull apart and leave gaps
between them. Molten rock bubbles in
the gaps. This is the name of the molten
rock from Earth’s mantle.
$400 Answer from Mountains
What is magma?
$500 Question from Mountains
This is how many of the highest mountains form.
$500 Answer from Mountains
What is continental plates colliding? As
plates push together, their edges crumble
and fold into mountains.
$100 Question from Volcanoes
This is a mountain formed by lava and ash.
$100 Answer from Volcanoes
What is a volcano?
Click for more
information on
volcanoes.
$200 Question from Volcanoes
This is magma that reaches Earth’s surface.
$200 Answer from Volcanoes
What is lava?
$300 Question from Volcanoes
This is small pieces of
hardened lava.
$300 Answer from Volcanoes
What is ash?
$400 Question from Volcanoes
This is where many volcanoes
are located.
$400 Answer from Volcanoes
Where are plate boundaries around the
Pacific Plate?
$500 Question from Volcanoes
This is how volcanoes take their shape.
$500 Answer from Volcanoes
What is lava and ash building up around
volcanoes’ openings?
$100 Question from Earthquakes
This is the shaking of the ground caused by
a sudden release of energy in Earth’s crust.
$100 Answer from Earthquakes
What is an earthquake?
$200 Question from
Earthquakes
This causes the sudden release of energy
that forms an earthquake.
$200 Answer from
Earthquakes
What is the energy released as Earth’s plates
crush together, scrape past each other, or
bend along boundaries?
$300 Question from
Earthquakes
This is an approximate number of
earthquakes that occur each year.
$300 Answer from
Earthquakes
What is more than a million?
$400 Question from
Earthquakes
These are places where pieces
of the crust move.
$400 Answer from
Earthquakes
What are faults?
$500 Question from
Earthquakes
This is the form of energy sent out my
earthquakes.
$500 Answer from
Earthquakes
What are seismic
waves?
More
Information on
Earthquakes
$100 Question from
Continental Drift
This is the theory of how Earth’s continents
move over its surface.
$100 Answer from
Continental Drift
What is continental
drift?
Our Earth 225
million years ago
and a look into
the future with
Continental Drift
$200 Question from
Continental Drift
This is the name of Earth’s
supercontinent from millions of years
ago.
$200 Answer from
Continental Drift
What is Pangea?
$300 Question from
Continental Drift
Pangea broke into these two continents.
$300 Answer from
Continental Drift
What are Gondwana and Laurasia?
$40Question from
Continenta0 l Drift
This is why you can infer that the
surface of Earth will be very different
200 million years from now.
$400 Answer from
Continental Drift
What is our continents are still moving?
$500 Question from
Continental Drift
These are remains or traces of past life
found in some rocks.
$500 Answer from
Continental Drift
What are fossils?
Final Jeopardy
According to the Continental Drift
Theory, this is about how many
millions of years ago Earth was joined
together in one super continent called
Pangea.
Final Jeopardy Answer
What was 225 million years ago?
Corresponding Standards
PA Academic Standards
3.5 Earth Sciences
A. Describe earth features and processes.
• Describe major layers of the earth.
• Describe the processes involved in the creation of geologic features
(e.g., folding, faulting, volcanism, sedimentation) and that these processes seen today (e.g., erosion, weathering crustal plate
movement) are similar to those in the past.
• Describe the processes that formed Pennsylvania geologic structures and resources including mountains, glacial
formations, water gaps and ridges.
• Distinguish between examples of rapid surface changes (e.g., landslides, earthquakes) and slow surface changes (e.g.,
weathering).
Standards for Global Learning in the Digital Age:
2. Communication and Collaboration Students use digital media and environments to communicate and work
collaboratively, including at a distance, to support individual learning and contribute to the learning of others.
Students:
•Interact, collaborate, and publish with peers, experts, or others employing a variety of digital environments and
media.
•Communicate information and ideas effectively to multiple audiences using a variety of media and formats.
•Contribute to project teams to produce original words or solve problems.
3. Research and Information Fluency Students apply digital tools to gather, evaluate, and use information.
Students:
•Plan strategies to guide inquiry.
•Locate, organize, analyze, evaluate, synthesize, and ethnically use information from a variety of sources and media.
4. Critical Thinking, Problem Solving, and Decision Making Students use critical thinking skills to plan and conduct
research, manage projects, solve problems, and make informed decisions using appropriate digital tools and
resources.
Students:
•Collect and analyze data to identify solutions and/or make informed decisions
•Use multiple processes and diverse perspectives to explore alternative solutions
Credits
•Video Clips:
•http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lyysL02ZvQ8
•http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xVYJAUMqFrU&feature=fvst
•http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hSdlQ8x7cuk
•Information Sources:
•Harcourt Science Textbook, 2002. Harcourt School Publishers,
Orlando.
•http://www2.scholastic.com/browse/article.jsp?id=4886
•http://earthquake.usgs.gov/learn/kids/eqscience.php
•Image Sources:
•All images were taken from Microsoft Clip Art.