EALS

Cards (87)

  • Terrestrial Planets
    Have solid surfaces, dense and metallic core, nitrogen and carbon dioxide are abundant in their atmosphere
  • Terrestrial Planets
    • Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars
  • Jovian Planets
    Have gaseous surfaces, less dense core supposedly molten rock, hydrogen and helium are vastly present in its atmosphere
  • Jovian Planets
    • Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune
  • Six factors that make Earth habitable
    • Closeness to the Sun
    • Earth's Atmosphere
    • Earth's consistent temperature
    • Earth's moon
    • Diversity of Life
    • Water
  • Closeness to the Sun
    Earth's distance from the sun is 151.2 million kilometers, enabling Earth to get much-needed heat
  • Ozone Layer
    Helps to warm the planet by day and cools it at night
  • With Moon
    1 day=24 hours
  • Without Moon
    1 day=4 hours
  • Food chain
    Sustains the survival and evolution of organisms
  • Biodiversity and Evolution
    Are products of the interaction of organisms with their environment
  • Earth is covered 71% water
  • Atmosphere
    Gaseous layer above Earth's surface, primarily composed of 78% nitrogen and 20.9% oxygen, supports life of human, plants, and animals, protects us from harmful ultraviolet solar radiation
  • Hydrosphere
    The water part of the Earth which circulates among oceans, continents, glaciers, and atmosphere
  • Cryosphere
    The frozen water part of the Earth system
  • Cryosphere
    • Albedo Effect
  • Geosphere
    The solid Earth, consisting of the entire planet from the center of the core to the outer crust, includes the rocks and minerals - from the molten rock and heavy metals in the deep interior of the planet to the sand on beaches and peaks of mountains
  • Biosphere
    All forms of life exist; in the see, on land, and in water, they are all connected
  • Geology
    The study of the Earth: its history, nature, materials and processes
  • Geologist
    Scientists who study the Earth: its history, nature, materials and processes
  • Mineralogy
    The study of the chemistry, crystal structure and physical properties of the mineral constituents of rocks
  • Mineralogist
    A person who studies minerals
  • Petrology
    The scientific study of rocks
  • Petrologist
    Person who study rocks
  • Mineral
    A naturally occurring, inorganic, homogeneous solid, with a definite chemical composition, and an ordered crystalline structure
  • Characteristics of Minerals
    • Natural Occuring
    • Chemically Inorganic
    • Homogenous Solids
    • Crystalline Structure
    • Definite Chemical Composition
  • Physical Properties of Minerals
    • Color
    • Streak
    • Hardness
    • Cleavage
    • Crystalline
    • Diaphaneity
    • Luster
    • Tenacity
    • Specific Gravity
  • Rock
    A naturally occurring solid aggregate of one or more minerals
  • Igneous Rocks
    Formed from the crystallization and solidification, Latin word "Ignis" which means "Fire"
  • Sedimentary Rocks
    Formed from the accumulation of sediments, word "Sediments", which means "to settle at the bottom"
  • Types of Sedimentary Rocks
    • Clastic - Formed from accumulation of clasts (little pieces of broken rocks and shells)
    • Chemicals - Formed when dissolved minerals precipitate from a solution
    • Organic - Made from the remains of plants and animals and may contain fossils. Ex. Coal
  • Formation of Sedimentary Rocks
    1. Erosion
    2. Deposition
    3. Cementation
  • Metamorphic Rock
    Rocks that are formed from igneous or sedimentary, Meta means "change" and morph means "form"
  • Types of Metamorphism Rocks
    • Contact – Mainly heat due to contact with magma
    • Regional Metamorphism - Due to the changes in pressure and temperature over large region in the crust
  • Types of Metamorphic Rock
    • Foliated Metamorphic Rock - appeared banded or layered
    • Non-foliated Metamorphic rocks- the grains are random and do not splits into layers
  • Exogenic Processes
    Geologic processes that occur on the surface of the earth
  • Weathering
    Disintegration of rocks, soils, and minerals together with other with other materials through contact in Earth's subsystem
  • Factors of Physical Weathering
    • Release of Pressure
    • Frost Wedging
    • Abrasion
    • Biological Activity
    • Human Activity
  • Factors of Chemical Weathering
    • Dissolution
    • Hydrolysis
    • Oxidation
  • Erosion
    The process which Earth's surface is worn away by wind, water, or ice, Erosion moves rock debris or soil from one place to another