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10

Science
Learner’s Material
Unit 1

m public and private schools, colleges, and/or universities. We encourage teachers and other education stakeholders to email thei

Department of Education
Republic of the Philippines

All rights reserved. No part of this material may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means -
electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition,
2015.
Science – Grade 10
Learner’s Material
First Edition 2015

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ii
All rights reserved. No part of this material may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means -
electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition,
2015.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Unit 1: Earth and Space
Overview
Module 1: Plate Tectonics
I. Introduction----------------------------------------------------------------------------------3
II. Learning Competencies/Objectives---------------------------------------------------4
III. Pre-Assessment---------------------------------------------------------------------------4
IV. Reading Resources and Instructional Activities-----------------------------------6
Activity 1: Find the Center----------------------------------------------------------8
Activity 2: Let’s Mark the Boundaries------------------------------------------11
Activity 3: Head on Collision-----------------------------------------------------16
Activity 4: Going Separate Ways-----------------------------------------------25
Activity 5: Slide and Shake------------------------------------------------------29
Activity 6: Drop It Like Its “Hot Spot”------------------------------------------31
V. Summative Assessment----------------------------------------------------------------34
VI. Summary/Synthesis/Feedback------------------------------------------------------35
Glossary of Terms------------------------------------------------------------------36
References and Links-------------------------------------------------------------37

Module 2: The Earth’s Interior


I. Introduction--------------------------------------------------------------------------------39
II. Learning Competencies/Objectives-------------------------------------------------40
III. Pre-Assessment-------------------------------------------------------------------------40
IV. Reading Resources and Instructional Activities---------------------------------43
Activity 1: Amazing Waves!------------------------------------------------------47
Activity 2: Our Dynamic Earth---------------------------------------------------52
Activity 3: Let’s Fit It!---------------------------------------------------------------58

Activity 4: Drifted Supercontinent!----------------------------------------------59


Activity 5: Split and Separate!---------------------------------------------------66

Activity 6: How fast does it go!---------------------------------------------------69

Activity 7: Push me up and aside!----------------------------------------------70

V. Summative Assessment---------------------------------------------------------------74

VI. Summary/Synthesis/Feedback------------------------------------------------------77

Glossary of Terms------------------------------------------------------------------78

References and Links-------------------------------------------------------------79


UNIT 1
Earth and Space

All rights reserved. No part of this material may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means -
electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition,
2015.
Unit 1: Earth and Space
Overview
In your Grade 9 Science, part of your lessons was
about volcanoes. You have learned about the position of
the Philippines in the Ring of Fire and its relationship to
the presence of active and inactive volcanoes in our
country.
In this quarter, the topics will focus solely on a
theory that explains the existence of volcanoes and
other geologic features. You have two modules to
understand this theory better.
In the first module, you will use some of your
science skills such as graphing, measuring, analyzing
and interpreting data, and inferring for you to attain the
desired outcomes.
What are the outcomes that are expected from
you? First, you should identify the types of boundaries
created because of lithospheric movements. Secondly,
you must relate the movement of Earth’s lithosphere to
the occurrence of different geologic changes. And finally,
you will explain the processes that are taking place
along the boundaries.
In the second module, you will perform an activity
that will allow you to probe the Earth’s interior by
analyzing the behavior of seismic waves (Primary and
Secondary waves). You will also have an opportunity to
simulate one of the properties of the materials present in
the mantle.
Lastly, included in the module, and the most
important part is the series of activities that will give you
an idea about the driving mechanism behind the motion
of Earth’s lithosphere.

All rights reserved. No part of this material may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means -
electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition,
2015.
Unit 1
MODUL
E

1
I. Introduction
PLATE TECTONICS

Our country is blessed with so many land features such as mountains


and volcanoes. These features can be sources of different minerals or can be
used for agricultural purposes. For example, we have the majestic and world
renowned Mayon Volcano. Because of its activity, it produces fertile slopes
and plains which are used by the locals to grow their crops. Also, found in the
northeastern coast of Luzon, we have the Sierra Madre mountain range which
is home to many endemic species of flora and fauna.
Have you ever wondered why our country is endowed with these kind
of geologic features? Well, if your answer is YES, then this module will help
you find the answer to your question.
In this module, we will study thoroughly the framework that will enable
us to understand how and why several features of the Earth continuously
change. This theory is what we call “Plate Tectonics.”
This describes the events within the Earth that give rise to mountain
ranges, volcanoes, earthquake belts, and other features of the Earth’s surface.
At the end of Module 1, you are expected to answer the key question
below:

What is the relationship among the locations of volcanoes, earthquake


epicenters, and mountain ranges?
II. Learning Competencies/Objectives
In this module, you should be able to:
1. Describe the distribution of active volcanoes, earthquake epicenters,
and major mountain belts.
2. Describe the different types of plate boundaries.
3. Explain the different processes that occur along the plate boundaries.

III. Pre-Assessment
Choose the letter of the correct answer.
Displacement (cm)

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Time (seconds)

For questions 1 and 2, refer to the figure above:


1. You were provided with data showing the arrival time of the P and
S-waves recorded from three seismic stations. Which of these can
you possibly determine?
a. the damage at the focus c. the intensity of the earthquake
b. the distance to the earthquake d. the location of the epicenter

2. From the seismogram, the distance to the epicenter can be


determined by measuring
a. the arrival time of surface wave
b. the difference in the arrival times of the P and S-waves
c. the ratio of the amplitude of the largest P and S-waves
d. the speed of the surface wave

3. When two tectonic plates collide, the oceanic crust usually


subducts beneath the continental crust because it is
a. denser than continental crust c. thicker than continental crust
b. less dense than continental crust d. thinner than continental crust
4. If you visit a place in the Pacific known to be along converging plates,
which of these should you NOT expect to see?
a. active volcanoes c. rift valleys
b. mountain ranges d. volcanic islands

5. You are an oceanographer and want to map the ocean floor on the
east coast of the Philippines. As you do your study, you notice that
there is a portion in the ocean floor which is relatively much deeper
than the rest. What most likely is that deeper part?
a. linear sea c. rift valley
b. oceanic ridge d. trench

6. What do you expect to find at a mid-ocean ridge?


a. relatively young rocks c. thick accumulation of sediments
b. reverse fault d. very ancient rocks

7. Crustal plate A is moving away from crustal plate B. What is the


expected average rate of change in position between A and B?
a. a few centimeters per year c. a few millimeters per century
b. a few meters per month d. a few millimeters per day

8. Which plate boundary is formed between the Philippine plate and


the Eurasian plate?
a. convergent c. reverse fault
b. divergent d. transform fault

9. Which of these is false about lithosperic plates:


a. have the same thickness everywhere
b. include the crust and upper mantle
c. thickest in the mountain regions
d. vary in thickness

10. Which of these is NOT true about the Philippine islands?


a. most are part of the Philippine Mobile Belt, except for Palawan,
Mindoro, and Zamboanga
b. formed because of the convergence of the Philippine plate and
the Pacific plate
c. originated geologically in an oceanic-oceanic convergence
d. some are products of subduction process
IV. Reading Resources and Instructional Activities

What is Plate Tectonics?


Earth’s lithosphere consists of layers, the crust and the upper part of
the mantle. This part of the module will focus on the outermost layer which is
called crust.
The crust is made of a variety of solid rocks like sedimentary,
metamorphic, and igneous. It has an average density of 2.8 g/cm 3 and its
thickness ranges from 5 to 50 km. The crust is thickest in a part where a
relatively young mountain is present and thinnest along the ocean floor.

Continental crust

Oceanic crust

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Mantle

Figure 1. Kinds of crust

You will notice from Figure 1 that there are two kinds of crust: the
thicker but less dense continental crust and the oceanic crust which is
relatively thinner but denser than continental crust.
According to the plate tectonics model, the entire lithosphere of the Earth
is broken into numerous segments called plates (see Figure 2).
http://pubs.usgs.gov
Figure 2. Map of Plate boundaries

As shown in Figure 2, there are seven relatively large plates and a


number of smaller ones, including the Philippine plate. The plates move very
slowly but constantly, and this movement is called tectonics; thus the theory
of moving lithospheric plates is called plate tectonics.
Before we study more about plate tectonics, let’s discuss first one of
the consequences of moving crustal plates which is crucial in studying plate
tectonics: earthquake.
You have learned in your Grade 8 Science that an earthquake releases
three types of seismic waves; Primary (P-waves), Secondary (S-waves), and
Long surface waves (L-waves). The first two travel into the Earth’s interior
while the last one on the surface. These waves travel at different velocities;
thus, do not arrive at a seismic recording station at the same time. The farther
the recording instrument is from the focus, the greater the difference in arrival
times of the first P-wave compared to the first S-wave. The difference in the
arrival time will tell us the distance of the earthquake’s focus from the seismic
recording station. However, it does not tell in which direction it came from.
If we have at least three recording stations that can tell how far away
from them the earthquake occurred, the epicenter can be determined using
the triangulation method. It uses distance information from three seismic
stations to locate the earthquake epicenter. On a map, circles are drawn
around each seismic station. The radii of the circles are scaled to the
estimated distance from the station to the earthquake. The three circles will
intersect at one point that locates the earthquake.
The next activity will give you a first-hand experience on how to locate
earthquake epicenter.

Activity 1
Find the Center
Objective:
Locate the epicenter of an earthquake using the triangulation method.

Materials:
• hypothetical records of earthquake waves
• Philippine map
• drawing compass and ruler

Procedure:
1. Study the data showing the difference in the arrival time of P-wave
and S-wave on three seismic recording stations.
Time difference in
the arrival time of P- Distance of epicenter
Recording station
wave and S-wave from the station (km)
(seconds)
Batangas 44.8
Puerto Princesa 32
Davao 38.4
2. Compute the distance of the epicenter from each of the stations
using this formula:

d= Td x 100 km
8 seconds

Where: d = distance (km)


Td = time difference in the arrival time of P-wave and S-wave
(seconds)
This formula is suited because 8 seconds is the interval between the
times of arrival of the P-wave and S-wave at a distance of 100 km.
3. Choose one of the recording stations and measure the computed
distance on the map scale (the scale of the map in Figure 3 is 1.5
cm: 200 km). Set your compass for that computed distance.

4. Center your compass on the station you have chosen. Draw a circle.

5. Repeat steps 3 and 4 for the rest of the stations. You should get
three circles that intersect or nearly intersect at a point. This
intersection is the epicenter.

CO
PED
http://earthquake.usgs.gov
Figure 3. Map of the Philippines
Q1. Where is the epicenter of this hypothetical earthquake?

Q2. What difficulty will you encounter if you only have data from two
recording stations?

In the previous activity, the hypothetical earthquake happened locally,


that is why we use the formula stated in the procedure. But, if the earthquake
took place at a far greater distance, seismologists use the distance-time
graph similar to the figure below in determining the location of the epicenter.
Time (minutes)

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Distance (km) from Epicenter

http://stream2.cma.gov.cn/pub/comet/Environment/TsunamiWarningSystems/comet/tsunami/
warningsystem/print.htm
Figure 4. Distance-time graph

The distance-time graph above shows that the S-P interval is about 10
minutes.

Q3. What is the distance of the epicenter from the seismic station?

Q4. What do you think is the importance of determining the epicenter


of an earthquake?

Determining the location of earthquake epicenters plays a vital role


in laying the foundations of plate tectonics. Let us see how early geologists
used the plotted positions of earthquake epicenters throughout the world in
conceptualizing crustal movements.
Activity 2
Let’s Mark the Boundaries

Objectives:
 Describe the distribution of active volcanoes, earthquake
epicenters, and major mountain belts.
 Determine the scientific basis for dividing the Lithospheric plates.

Materials:
 Figure 5: Map of earthquake distribution
 Figure 6: Map of active volcanoes of the world
 Figure 7: Mountain ranges of the world
 2 pieces plastic sheet used for book cover, same size as a book
page
 marking pens (two different colors)

EPE http://marc.fournier.free.free.fr
Figure 5. Map of earthquake distribution (Red, green, and blue dots represent earthquake
epicenters)

D
Procedure:
1. Study Figure 5 showing the earthquake distribution around the
world. Trace the approximate locations of several earthquake
“clusters” using a marking pen on one of the plastic sheets.

Q5. How are earthquakes distributed on the map?

Q6. Where are they located?

Q7. Where are there no earthquakes?

Q8. Why is it important for us to identify areas which are prone to


earthquakes?

COP

Y EPED http://pubs.usgs.gov/gip/volc/fig34.html
Figure 6. Map of active volcanoes (Red areas represent presence of volcanoes)

2. Study the map of active volcanoes in Figure 6.

Q9. How are volcanoes distributed?

Q10. Where are they located?

Q11. Based on the map, mention a country that is unlikely to experience


a volcanic eruption.
3. On the second plastic sheet, sketch the approximate locations of
several volcanoes using a marking pen.

4. Place the earthquake plastic sheet over the volcano plastic sheet.

Q12. Compare the location of majority of earthquake epicenters with


the location of volcanoes around the world.

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http://www.clipart.dk.co.uk/1068/az/Earth/Mountain_ranges
Figure 7. Mountain ranges of the world

5. Study Figure 7, the orange portions indicate mountain ranges of the


world.

Q13. How will you relate the distribution of mountain ranges with the
distribution of earthquake epicenters and volcanoes?

6. Now that you have seen the location of volcanoes, mountain


ranges, and majority of earthquake epicenters, study Figure 2 on
page 7, Map of Plate boundaries once more.

Q14. What do you think is the basis of scientists in dividing Earth’s


lithosphere into several plates?

The places on Earth where most of the earthquakes originated or


some mountains and volcanoes were formed mark the boundaries of each
lithospheric plate. As mentioned earlier, each plate is slowly moving relative to
each other, causing geologic events to happen along their boundaries.
Let’s take a look at the relative motion of the crustal plates in the figure
below.

https://www.bucknell.edu/majors-and-minors/geology/location/geologic-history-of-central-

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pennsylvania/plate-tectonics.html
Figure 8. Map showing the relative motion of plates (Arrows indicate the direction of motion)

Types of Plate Boundaries

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Studying plate boundaries is important because along these
boundaries deformation of the lithosphere is happening. These geologic
events have a great impact not only on the environment but also on us.
There are three distinct types of plate boundaries, which are
differentiated by the type of movement they exhibit.
The first type of plate boundary is termed divergent boundary wherein
plates move apart, creating a zone of tension. Can you identify adjacent
plates depicting divergent boundary on Figure 8?
Let’s take the case of the Philippine plate and the Eurasian plate. You
will notice that the two plates are moving toward each other. This is an
example of a zone where plates collide, and this second type of plate
boundary is called convergent plate boundary.
The third type is the transform fault boundary where plates slide or
grind past each other without diverging or converging. The best example of
this plate boundary is the San Andreas fault which is bounded by the North
American plate and the Pacific plate.
Plate Plate
Asthenosphere

A. DIVERGENT PLATE BOUNDARY

Plate Plate
Asthenosphere

B. CONVERGENT PLATE BOUNDARY

Plate
Asthenosphere
Plate

C. TRANSFORM FAULT BOUNDARY


http://earthsci8.wikispaces.com/
Figure 9. Three types of Plate Boundaries
After learning the different types of plate boundaries, let us now explore
the various effects of plate tectonics on Earth’s lithosphere.

Activity 3
Head-On Collision

Part A: Converging Continental Plate and Oceanic Plate

Objectives:

 Explain the processes that occur along convergent boundaries.


 Determine the consequences of colliding plates.

Procedure:
1. Study Figure 10 showing a cross-sectional diagram of plates that are
converging, and answer the questions that follow.

EPE
D Figure 10. Cross-sectional diagram of converging continental and oceanic plates

Q15. What type of plate is Plate A? What about Plate B? Why do you
say so?
Q16. Describe what happens to Plate A as it collides with Plate B?
Why?

Q17. What do you think may happen to the leading edge of Plate A as
it continues to move downward? Why?

Q18. What do you call this molten material?

Q19. What is formed on top of Plate B?

Q20. As the plates continue to grind against each other, what other
geologic event could take place?

Converging Oceanic Crust Leading Plate and Continental


Crust Leading Plate
The previous activity depicts what happens during collision of two
plates; one has continental edge while the other has an oceanic edge. From
the diagram, it is clear that this event gives rise to the formation of a volcanic
arc near the edge of a continental leading plate. The reason for this is
because the denser oceanic crust (Plate A) undergoes what we call
subduction process or the bending of the crust towards the mantle. Since the
mantle is hotter than the crust, the tendency is, the subducted crust melt
forming magma. Addition of volatile material such as water will cause the
magma to become less dense, hence allowing it to rise and reach the crust
once again and causing volcanic activities on the continental leading plate.
For the oceanic crust, one important geologic feature is formed, and
that is the trench. Also called submarine valleys, ocean trenches are the
deepest part of the ocean. One of the deepest is the Philippine trench with a
depth of 10 540 meters.
Another subsequent effect of the continuous grinding of plates against
each other is the occurrence of earthquakes. The subduction of plate can
cause earthquakes at varying depths. Most parts of the world experience
occasional shallow earthquakes – where the focus is within 60 km of the
Earth’s surface. Of the total energy released by earthquakes, 85% comes
from shallow earthquakes. Meanwhile, about 12% of energy originates from
intermediate earthquakes or those quakes with a focal depth range of 60 to
300 km. Lastly, are the deep earthquakes whose origin is more than 300 km
to 700 km below the Earth’s surface.
Activity 3
Head-On Collision

Part B: Convergence of Two Oceanic Plates

Procedure:

1. Study Figure 11. It shows a cross-section of two converging oceanic


plates.

2. Using your knowledge gained from the previous activity, identify the
geologic events or features resulting from this collision.

Ocean Water

Oceanic Plate A COP Oceanic Plate B

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www.marinebio.net
Figure 11. Cross-sectional diagram of converging oceanic plates

Q21. What are the geologic processes/events that will occur because
of this plate movement?

Q22. What geologic features might form at the surface of Plate A?

Q23. If the edge of Plate A suddenly flicks upward, a large amount of


water may be displaced. What could be formed at the surface of
the ocean?
Convergence of Oceanic Plates
Like the first type of convergent boundaries discussed earlier,
converging oceanic plates will cause formation of trenches, and these
trenches will become sources of earthquakes. Underwater earthquakes,
especially the stronger ones, can generate tsunamis. The Japanese term for
“harbor wave,” tsunami is a series of ocean waves with very long wavelengths
(typically hundreds of kilometers) caused by large-scale disturbances of the
ocean.
The leading edge of the subducted plate will eventually reach the
mantle causing it to melt and turn into magma. The molten material will rise to
the surface creating a volcanic island arc parallel to the trench. Volcanic
island arc is a chain of volcanoes position in an arc shape as seen in figure
below.
Accretionary wedge
Volcanic island ark
OceanicForearc
crustTrenchbasin

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Backarc region

Magma

Y EPED
Lithosphere
100-km depth

http://bwbearthenviro2011.wikispaces.com
Figure 12. Formation of a volcanic island arc

Formation of the Philippine Archipelago


Many parts of the Philippines originated from oceanic-oceanic
convergence. This resulted from the collision of two oceanic plates, with one
of the plates diving under the other.
Majority of the islands in the Philippine archipelago are considered as
part of the Philippine Mobile Belt. These islands were formed 65 million years
ago at the southern edge of the Philippine Sea Plate and are considered as
part of island arcs. Other parts of the Philippines, such as Palawan, Mindoro,
and the Zamboanga Peninsula are all highland sections of the Sundaland
block of the Eurasian plate (see Figure 13).

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Figure 13. Sundaland block of Eurasian Plate which includes Palawan, Mindoro, and
Zamboanga

The Philippine Mobile Belt eventually collided with the Sundaland block
which explains the presence of trenches, such as the Manila-Negros-
Cotabato Trench System, and the Sulu Trench, as shown in Figure 14.
COP

Y EPED
Figure 14. Distribution of Active Faults and Trenches in the Philippines
On the eastern side of the Philippines, trenches like the Philippine
Trench and East Luzon Trough are both products of subducting Philippine
Sea Plate beneath the archipelago.

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http://www.earthobservatory.sg/resources/images-graphics/subduction-zone-beneath-
philippines
Figure 15. Subduction of Philippine Sea Plate

Aside from the formation of trenches and troughs, the downward


movement of oceanic lithospheres underneath the Philippine Archipelago
creates active volcanic chains. For example, the descent of the West
Philippine Sea oceanic lithosphere along the Manila Trench created a
volcanic chain from Taiwan to Mindoro. Some of the known active volcanoes
in this chain are Pinatubo in Central Luzon and Taal in Batangas.

Also, the constant dipping movement of slabs induces frequent


moderate to strong earthquakes at various depths, gives rise to mountain
ranges and develops the geologic character of the Philippine Archipelago.
Activity 3
Head-On Collision

Part C: Two Continental Plates Converging

Materials:
 modeling clay
 2 blocks of wood
 paper

Procedure:

1. On a piece of paper, flatten the modeling clay with the palm of your
hand.

2. Cut the clay into four strips; each strip should be 0.5 cm thick, 4 cm
wide, and 12 cm long.

3. Put 4 strips one on top of the other.

4. Place a block of wood at each end of the clay strips and slowly push
the two blocks together. Observe what happens to the clay.

EPE
D
Q24. What happened to the strips of clay as they were pushed from
opposite ends?

Q25. If the strips of clay represent the Earth’s lithosphere, what do you
think is formed in the lithosphere?

Q26. What other geologic event could take place with this type of plate
movement aside from your answer in Q25?
Q27. In terms of the consequences on the Earth’s lithosphere, how will
you differentiate this type of convergent plate boundary with the
other two?

When two continental plates converge, a collision zone is formed.


Unlike the other two types of convergent boundaries, subduction ceases for
this particular type of convergence. No trench, no volcano, and definitely no
island arc are created during this process. Instead, what is created is a large
group of tall mountains called mountain range.

COP
http://whybecausescience.com/category/vulcanism/
Figure 16. Formation of mountain range

About 40 to 50 million years ago, two large land masses, India and
Eurasia, collided to begin the formation of the most visible product of plate
tectonics - the Himalayas. Since subduction is impossible between two
colliding continental plates, pressure is released by pushing the crusts
upward and forming the Himalayan peaks.

Also, collision of continental plates is associated with shallow earthquake


activities.

http://pubs.usgs.gov/
Figure 17. Collision of the Eurasian and Indian plates
After learning the effects of convergent plate boundaries on the Earth’s
lithosphere, it’s time for us to move on to the next type of plate boundary: the
divergent plate boundary.

Activity 4
Going Separate Ways

Objectives:
 Explain the processes that occur along divergent boundaries.
 Determine the results of plates that are moving apart.

Materials:
photographs of Rift Valleys and Oceanic Ridges

Procedure:

1. Analyze the photographs of rift valleys (topmost pictures) and


oceanic ridges below, and answer the questions that follow.

EPE
D http://www.adelaidenow.com.au/, http://www.wildjunket.com/, http://www.jnb-birds.com/
Figure 18. Rift valleys and oceanic ridges
Q28. What are common in the four pictures?

Q29. Millions of years ago, the land masses in each picture were once
connected. What do you think is happening to the Earth’s crust
in those pictures?

Q30. If this event continues for millions of years, what do you think will
be the effect on the crust?

Q31. Complete the drawing below to illustrate your answer in question


number 30.

At present

CO
After millions of years

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Divergence of Plates
Formation of rift valleys and oceanic ridges are indications that the
crust is spreading or splitting apart. In this case, the plates are forming
divergent plate boundaries wherein they tend to move apart. Most divergent
boundaries are situated along underwater mountain ranges called oceanic
ridges. As the plates separate, new materials from the mantle ooze up to fill
the gap. These materials will slowly cool to produce new ocean floor.

The spreading rate at these ridges may vary from 2 to 20 cm per year.
Although a very slow process, divergence of plates ensures a continuous
supply of new materials from the mantle. The Mid-Atlantic Ocean ridge is an
example of spreading center which causes the divergence of the South
American plate and the African plate.
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Figure 19. Formation of Mid-Ocean ridge (Diagram by Phyllis Newbill)

When a spreading center develops within a continent, the crust may


break into several segments. The breaking leads to the formation of down

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faulted valleys called rift valleys. It is also associated with the rising of hot
materials from the mantle.

The rift valley increases its length and depth as the spreading
continues. At this point, the valley develops into a linear sea, similar to the
Red Sea today.
COP
http://www.moorlandschool.co.uk/earth/tectonic.htm
Figure 20. Development of a rift valley

In Grade 8, you were introduced to different types of fault such as


normal, reverse, and strike-slip. You also learned that faults are fractures in
the Earth’s crust created by different types of forces acting on the lithosphere.

There is one type of plate boundary that resembles the strike-slip fault.
Though much larger, transform fault boundary is similar to strike-slip fault in
terms of the relative motion of adjacent slabs of rock.

To find out more about this kind of plate boundary, the next activity will
let you simulate the event that could happen out of this boundary.
Activity 5
Slide and Shake

Objective:
determine the effect of transform-fault boundary on the Earth’s crust.

Materials:
 four blocks of wood:
blocks 1 and 4 measures 5 cm x 5 cm x 10 cm
while blocks 2 and 3 measures 5 cm x 5 cm x 15 cm
 two hook screws
 sandpaper

Procedure:
1. Attach a hook screw on one end of Blocks 2 and 3.
2. Arrange the blocks as shown in the illustration below.
3. Place sandpaper on the side of the blocks where they all meet.
4. Slowly pull Blocks 2 and 3 on its hook screw to the direction
indicated by the arrow. Observe the motion of the blocks.

EPE
Q32. Were you able to pull the blocks of wood easily? Why or why not?

Q33. What can you say about the relative motion of blocks 1 and 2?
How about blocks 3 and 4?

D
Q34. How will you describe the interaction between blocks 2 and 3 as
you pull each block?

Q35. What is the interaction between blocks 1 and 3? How about


between blocks 2 and 4?
Transform Fault Boundaries
If the blocks of wood in Activity 6 were to represent the lithospheric
plates, you will notice that there were two sets of divergent plate boundaries
(between blocks 1 and 2, and blocks 3 and 4). But since the plates were
adjacent to each other, a new type of boundary is manifested and that is the
transform fault boundary.

Most transform faults join two segments of a mid-ocean ridge


(represented by the gaps between 1 and 2, and between 3 and 4).
Remember that the presence of a ridge is an indication of diverging plates,
and as the plates diverge between the two segments of the mid-ocean ridge,
the adjacent slabs of crust are grinding past each other (blocks 2 and 3,
blocks 1 and 3, and blocks 2 and 4).

Although most transform faults are located within the ocean basins,
there are a few that cut through the continental crust. An example of this is
the San Andreas fault. The immediate concerns about transform fault
boundaries are earthquake activities triggered by movements along the fault
system.

EPE sanandreasfault.org
Figure 21. San Andreas Fault

D
It was stated at the beginning of this module that majority of tectonic
activities like earthquakes, mountain formations, and volcanic activities
happen along or near plate boundaries. But there are some cases wherein
activities take place in the middle of a plate.

Let’s take the case of the Hawaiian islands. Here, we can find some
of the largest and most active volcanoes of the world. If we’re going to look
at Hawaii, it is situated right in the middle of Pacific plate and not along the
boundaries.
What causes the formation of this chain of volcanic islands? The
answer lies in an area called hot spot. To better understand this, let’s perform
the next activity.

Activity 6
Drop It Like It’s “Hot Spot”
Objective:
Relate hot spot with plate tectonics

Materials:
 alcohol lamp  test tube  test tube holder
 bond paper (2 sheets)  match  water

Procedure:
1. Attach one end of the bond paper to the end of another bond paper.
2. Fill 3/4 of the test tube with water and heat it over an alcohol lamp.
3. While waiting for the water to boil, place the paper on top of the test
tube. Be sure that the two are in contact.

EPE 4. Once the water starts boiling and fumes are coming out, hold the

D
paper in the same position for the next 10 seconds.
5. After 10 seconds, move the bond paper very slowly and
horizontally by 10 centimeters. See to it that the paper and test
tube are still in contact.
6. Repeat step 5 after another 10 seconds and observe.

Q36. What can you see on the surface of the bond paper?
Q37. Let’s say that the paper represents the Earth’s crust; what do
you think is represented by the water in the test tube?

Q38. What geologic feature do you think will be formed at the surface
of the crust?

Q39. Which of the features, at the surface of the crust, will be the
oldest? the youngest? Label these on your paper.

Q40. Which of the features will be the most active? The least active?
Label these on your paper.

Activity 6 gave you an idea how tectonic activities could also happen
within a plate and not just along the boundaries.

This idea started when extensive mapping of seafloor volcanoes in the


Pacific revealed a chain of volcanic structures extending from the Hawaiian
Islands to Midway Islands. When geologists determined the age of each
volcanic island through radiometric dating, they noticed that the farther the
volcano from Hawaii is, the older and less active it is.

Scientists suggested that there is a source of molten materials from


the mantle called mantle plume that formed the volcanic island chains. As the
Pacific plate moves, different parts of it will be on top of the mantle plume to
receive the molten materials, thus creating the volcanic islands. Continuing
plate movement eventually carries the island beyond the hot spot, cutting it
off from the magma source, and volcanism ceases. As one island volcano
becomes extinct, another develops over the hot spot, and the cycle is
repeated. This process of volcano growth and death, over many millions of
years, has left a long trail of volcanic islands and seamounts across the
Progressively older

Ocean

Mantle plume

Pacific Ocean floor.


http://www.geo.hunter.cuny.edu/
Figure 22. Hot spot forming a chain of volcanoes
Performance Task
At this point, we are quite aware that our country is susceptible to
different disasters such as earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, and tsunamis.
Therefore, it is a must for us to prepare and ensure our safety and survival
when these disasters strike.

For this activity, your goal is to help your family prepare for an
impending emergency. Your task is to prepare an emergency kit for the whole
family. Decide what items should be in your emergency kit and be ready to
present it in class.

The scoring rubric below will be used in assessing your kit.

1 pt. 2 pts. 3 pts. 4 pts.


Survival Kit None of the A few of At least 8 items At least
Items items are the items are clearly 10 items
necessary are clearly necessary for are clearly
for survival necessary survival during necessary for
during or for survival or after a survival during
after a during or after disaster. or after a
disaster. a disaster. disaster.
Labels and None of A few of At least 8 of At least 10
Uses the items the items the items are items are
are labeled are labeled labeled properly labeled
properly and properly and and a reason properly and
there is no a reason for for each item is a reason for
reason for each item is included on a each item is
including it in included on separate sheet stated on a
the survival a separate of paper. separate sheet
kit. sheet of of paper.
paper.
1 pt. 2 pts. 3 pts. 4 pts.
Neatness The kit is not The kit is The kit is done The kit
and Effort organized. somewhat well with some is neatly
exerted It looks like organized organization organized
the student and it looks and labeling. and labeled
threw it like the It appears the as necessary.
together student ran student worked Much time and
at the last out of time hard on it. effort were put
minute or didn’t take into creating
without much care of the this project.
care. project.
V. Summative Assessment

Directions: Answer the following questions;

1. Predict what geologic features could result out of this plate


boundary (three possible answers).

2. In a hot spot, Volcano A is on top of the mantle plume, Volcano B is


10 km farther from A while Volcano C is the farthest. What can you
infer about the ages of the volcanoes?
a. Volcano A is older than C c. Volcano B is the youngest
b. Volcano B is the oldest d. Volcano B is younger than C

3. Right in the middle of an island, you can find a rift valley. What type
of plate boundary exists on that island?
a. convergent b. divergent c. normal fault d. transform fault

4. Plates A and B shows a divergent boundary. If plate C is adjacent


to both plates and does not show any relative motion, what type of
plate boundary is present between A and C?

5. What geologic event is most likely to happen at the given type of


plate boundary in number 4?
a. earthquake c. rift valley formation
b. mountain formation d. volcanic eruption
6. You were asked to locate the epicenter of a recent earthquake. Which
correct sequence of events should you follow?
i. Determine the difference in the arrival time of S and P
waves recorded from each of the seismological stations.
ii. Use the triangulation method to locate the center.
iii. Obtain data from three different seismological stations.
iv. Determine the distance of the epicenter from the station.

a. i, iii, ii, iv b. iii, i, iv, ii c. iii, iv, i, ii d. iv, ii, i, iii

7. What do you expect to find parallel to a trench?


a. hot spot b. ocean ridge c. rift valley d. volcanic arc

Matching type:
Match column A with columns B and C

A B C
Type of Plate Relative Motion of the Geologic Features/
Boundary Plates Events Present
8. Divergent a. Moving away from d. Earthquakes
each other
9. Convergent b. Moving towards each e. Mountains,
other volcanoes, trenches,
and earthquakes
10. Transform fault c. Sliding past each other f. Rift valleys, oceanic
ridges, and
earthquakes

VI. Summary/Synthesis/Feedback
 According to the plate tectonics model, the entire lithosphere of the Earth
is broken into numerous segments called plates.
 Each plate is slowly but continuously moving.
 As a result of the motion of the plates, three types of plate boundaries
were formed: Divergent, Convergent, and Transform fault boundaries.
 Divergent boundary is formed when plates move apart, creating a zone
of tension.
 Convergent boundary is present when two plates collide.
 Transform fault is characterized by plates that are sliding past each
other.
 Plate tectonics give rise to several geologic features and events.
Glossary of Terms

Continental volcanic arc mountains formed in part by igneous activity


associated with subduction of oceanic
lithosphere beneath a continent

Convergent boundary a boundary in which two plates move toward each


other, causing one of the slabs of the
lithosphere to subduct beneath an overriding
plate

Crust the outer portion of the earth


Continental Crust the thick part of the Earth’s crust, not located
under the ocean
Oceanic Crust the thin part of the Earth’s crust located under
the oceans
Divergent boundary a region where the crustal plates are moving
apart

Earthquake vibration of Earth due to the rapid release of


energy
Fault a break in a rock along which movement has
occurred
Fracture any break in a rock in which no
significant movement has taken place

Geology the science that studies Earth

Hot spot a concentration of heat in the mantle capable of


creating magma

Magma a mass of molten rock formed at depth, including


dissolved gases and crystals.

Mid-ocean ridge a continuous mass of land with long width and


height on the ocean floor.
Plates rigid sections of the lithosphere that move as a
unit
Plate tectonics a theory which suggests that Earth’s crust
is made up of plates that interact in various
ways, thus producing earthquakes, mountains,
volcanoes, and other geologic features
Primary (P) wave the first type of seismic wave to be recorded in a
seismic station

Rocks consolidated mixture of minerals

Secondary (S) wave second type of earthquake wave to be recorded


in a seismic station

Seismogram a record made by a seismograph

Seismograph a device used to record earthquake waves

Subduction an event in which a slab of rock thrusts into the


mantle

Transform fault boundary a boundary produced when two plates slide past
each other

Trench a depression in the seafloor produced by


subduction process

Volcanic Island arc a chain of volcanoes that develop parallel to a


trench

References and Links

Printed Materials:

Department of Education, Bureau of Secondary Education. Project EASE


Integrated Science 1, Module 12: Inside the Earth.
Department of Education, Bureau of Secondary Education (2013). Science
- Grade 8 Learner’s Module. Vibal Publishing House, Inc.
Punongbayan, R. et al. (1998). The Philippine Archipelago Volume 1.
Tarbuck, E.J. et al. (2009). Earth Science 12th ed. Pearson Education South
Asia Pte Ltd.
Yumul, Jr., Graciano P., Carla B. Dimalanta, Victor B. Maglambayan and
Edanjarlo J. Marquez, Tectonic Setting of a Composite Terrane: A
Review of the Philippine Island Arc System, 12 Geosciences Journal 1,
(March 2008), pp. 7−17.
Robert Hall, Reconstructing Cenozoic SE Asia
Electronic Sources:

http://www.palawan.nfo.ph/geology/ accessed August 20, 2014


http://www.skoool.ie/ accessed March 3, 2014
http://earthds.info/ accessed March 3, 2014
http://eqseis.geosc.psu.edu/ accessed March 4, 2014
http://www.platetectonics.com/ accessed March 5, 2014
http://geology.com/ accessed March 5, 2014
http://www.nws.noaa.gov/ accessed March 6, 2014
http://csep10.phys.utk.edu/ accessed March 6, 2014
http://pubs.usgs.gov/ accessed March 6, 2014
http://www.moorlandschool.co.uk/earth/tectonic.htm accessed March 7,
http://stream2.cma.gov.cn/pub/comet/Environment/TsunamiWarningSystems
accessed March 3 2014
https://www.bucknell.edu/majors-and-minors/geology/location/geologic-
history-of-central-pennsylvania/plate-tectonics.html accessed July 1,
2014
http://earthquake.usgs.gov
http://pubs.usgs.gov/gip/volc/fig34.html
http://www.clipart.dk.co.uk/1068/az/Earth/Mountain_ranges
http://earthsci8.wikispaces.com
www.maribio.net
http://bwbearthenviro2011.wikispaces.com
http://www.earthobservatory.sg/resources/images-graphics/subduction-zone-
beneath-philippines
http://whybecausescience.com/category/vulcanism
http://www.adelaidenow.com.au/
http://www.wildjunket.com/
http://www.jnb-birds.com/
http://www.radford.edu/jtso/GeologyofVirginia/Tectonics/
GeologyofVATectonics6-1c.html
sanandreasfault.org
http://www.geo.hunter.cuny.edu/
Unit 1
MODUL
E
THE EARTH’S
2 INTERIOR
I. Introduction
Scientists have studied heavenly bodies which are millions of miles
away from Earth. Equipped with powerful telescopes and space probes, they
were able to reach and examine the solar system and beyond. It seems ironic
then, that we haven’t, and we couldn’t reach the center of our very own
planet.

In Module 1, you have learned about the different processes and


landforms along plate boundaries that slowly shaped the Earth’s surface. In
Module 2, you will learn the connection between these processes with the
internal structure and mechanisms of our planet.

This module will help you visualize and understand the composition
and structure of the Earth’s interior. It provides you scientific knowledge that
will help you describe the different layers of the Earth as well as understand
their characteristics. You will also learn concepts that explain the physical
changes that it underwent in the past. This module also consists of activities
that will help you develop your critical thinking skills to have a deeper
understanding about the planet where you live.

At the end of this module, you will be able to answer the following key
questions:
How do the structure and composition of the Earth cause geologic activities and physical changes?
What are the possible causes of the lithospheric plate movements?
What proves the movement of the tectonic plates?
II. Learning Competencies/Objectives

In this module, you should be able to:

1. Describe the internal structure of the Earth.


2. Discuss the possible causes of plate movement.
3. Enumerate the lines of evidence that support plate movement.

III. Pre-Assessment

Directions:
A. Choose the letter of the correct answer.
For questions 1 and 2, refer to the figure below that shows the cross section
of the Earth as seismic waves travel through it.

CO

EPED
Seismic waves as they travel through the Earth

1. An S-wave shadow zone is formed as seismic waves travel through


the Earth’s body. Which of the following statements does this S-wave
shadow zone indicate?
a. The inner core is liquid.
b. The inner core is solid.
c. The mantle is solid.
d. The outer core is liquid.
2. Why are there no P-waves or S-waves received in the P-wave shadow
zone?
a. P-waves are absorbed and S-waves are refracted by Earth’s outer
core.
b. P-waves are refracted and S-waves are absorbed by Earth’s outer
core.
c. Both the P-waves and S-waves are refracted by Earth’s outer core.
d. Both the P-waves and S-waves are absorbed by Earth’s outer core.

3. What makes up the lithosphere?


a. Continental crust
b. Crust and the upper mantle
c. Oceanic crust and continental crust
d. Upper mantle

4. Miners dig into the Earth in search for precious rocks and minerals. In
which layer is the deepest explorations made by miners?
a. Crust c. Mantle
b. Inner core d. Outer core

5. How do you compare the densities of the Earth’s crust, mantle,


and core?
a. The mantle is less dense than the core but denser than the crust.
b. The mantle is less dense than both the core and the crust.
c. The mantle is denser than the core but less dense than the crust.
d. The mantle is denser than both the core and the crust.

6. The movement of the lithospheric plates is facilitated by a soft, weak


and plastic-like layer. Which of the following layers is described in the
statement?
a. Asthenosphere c. Lithosphere
b. Atmosphere d. Mantle

7. Alfred Wegener is a German scientist who hypothesized that the


Earth was once made up of a single large landmass called Pangaea.
Which of the following theories did Wegener propose?
a. Continental Drift Theory
b. Continental Shift Theory
c. Plate Tectonics
d. Seafloor Spreading Theory
8. If you are a cartographer, what will give you an idea that the
continents were once joined?
a. Ocean depth
b. Position of the south pole
c. Shape of the continents
d. Size of the Atlantic Ocean

9. Which observation was NOT instrumental in formulating the hypothesis


of seafloor spreading?
a. Depth of the ocean
b. Identifying the location of glacial deposits
c. Magnetization of the oceanic crust
d. Thickness of seafloor sediments

10. As a new seafloor is formed at the mid-ocean ridge, the old seafloor
farthest from the ridge is destroyed. Which of the stated processes
describes how the oceanic crust plunges into the Earth and destroyed
at the mantle?
a. Convection
b. Construction
c. Diversion
d. Subduction

B. Answer briefly the following questions.


1. What are the different layers of the Earth?
2. Why is there a need to study the Earth’s layers?
3. What proves the existence of the boundary between the crust and the
mantle?
4. What are the characteristics of the asthenosphere?
5. What do the shapes of the continents now tell us about their past?
IV. Reading Resources and Instructional Activities

Studying the Earth’s Interior

Scientists tried to explore and study the interior of the Earth. Yet, until
today, there are no mechanical probes or actual explorations done to totally
discover the deepest region of the Earth.
The Earth is made up of three layers: the crust, the mantle, and the
core. The study of these layers is mostly done in the Earth’s crust since
mechanical probes are impossible due to the tremendous heat and very high
pressure underneath the Earth’s surface.
In Grade 8, it was mentioned that seismic waves from earthquakes are
used to analyze the composition and internal structure of the Earth.

What are seismic waves?

You learned that an earthquake is a vibration of the Earth produced by


the rapid release of energy most often because of the slippage along a fault
in the Earth’s crust. This energy radiates in all directions from the focus in the
form of waves called seismic waves, which are recorded in seismographs.
The two main types of seismic waves are body waves and surface
waves.

Love wave

EPERayleigh wave
wave direction

DD
Figure 1. Surface Waves
Surface waves can only travel through the surface of the Earth. They
arrive after the main P and S waves and are confined to the outer layers of
the Earth. There are two types of surface waves: the Love waves and the
Rayleigh waves. Love wave is named after A.E.H. Love, a British
mathematician who worked out the mathematical model for this kind of wave
in 1911. It is faster than Rayleigh wave and it moves the ground in a side-to-
side horizontal motion, like that of a snake’s causing the ground to twist. This
is why Love waves cause the most damage to structures during an
earthquake.

The other kind of surface wave is the Rayleigh wave. It was named
after John William Strutt, Lord Rayleigh, who mathematically predicted the
existence of this kind of wave in 1885. A Rayleigh wave rolls along the ground
just like a wave rolls across a lake or an ocean. Since it rolls, it moves the
ground either up and down or side-to-side similar to the direction of the
wave’s movement. Most of the shaking felt from an earthquake is due to the
Rayleigh wave.

Unlike surface waves, body waves can travel through the Earth’s inner
layers. With this characteristic of the body waves, they are used by scientists
to study the Earth’s interior. These waves are of a higher frequency than the
surface waves.
The two types of body waves are the P-waves (primary waves) and the
S-waves (secondary waves).

What are P and S-waves?


The P-wave (primary wave) is a pulse energy that travels quickly
through the Earth and through liquids. The P-wave travels faster than the S-
wave. After an earthquake, it reaches a detector first (the reason why it is
called primary). The P-waves also called compressional waves, travel by
particles vibrating parallel to the direction the wave travel. They force the
ground to move backward and forward as they are compressed and
expanded. Most importantly, they travel through solids, liquids and gases.

The S-wave (secondary wave or shear wave) is a pulse energy that


travels slower than a P-wave through Earth and solids. The S-waves move
as shear or transverse waves, and force the ground to sway from side to side,
in rolling motion that shakes the ground back and forth perpendicular to the
direction of the waves. The idea that the S-waves cannot travel through any
liquid medium led seismologists to conclude that the outer core is liquid.
Figure 1 shows the vibration directions of P and S-waves.
Longitudinal P-wave Latitudinal S-wave

Vibration direction Vibration direction

Wave path Wave path


www.furuno.com
Figure 2. Body Waves

Scientists gained information about the Earth’s internal structure by


studying how seismic waves travel through the Earth. It involves measuring
the time it takes for both types of waves to reach seismic wave detecting
stations from the epicenter of an earthquake. An epicenter is a point in the
Earth’s surface directly above the focus. Since P-waves travel faster than S-
waves, they’re always detected first. The farther away from the epicenter
means the longer time interval between the arrival of P and S waves.

In 1909, Yugoslavian seismologist Andrija Mohorovičić (moh-haw-roh-


vuh-chich) found out that the velocity of seismic waves changes and
increases at a distance of about 50 kilometers below the Earth’s surface. This
led to the idea that there is a difference in density between the Earth’s
outermost layer (crust) and the layer that lies below it (mantle). The boundary
between these two layers is called Mohorovičić discontinuity in honor of
Mohorovičić, and is short termed Moho.
P-waves can travel
through liquids while S-waves
cannot. During an earthquake,
the seismic waves radiate from
the focus. Based on figure on
the right, the waves bend due to
change in density of the medium.
As the depth increases, the
density also increases.
http://www.cyberphysics.co.uk/
topics/earth/geophysics/Seismic%20 Waves
%20Reading.htm

Figure 3. Seismic waves as they travel through the Earth


P-waves are detected on the other side of the Earth opposite the focus.
A shadow zone from 103° to 142° exists from P-waves as shown in Figure 3.
Since P-waves are detected until 103°, disappear from 103° to 142°, then
reappear again, something inside the Earth must be bending the P-waves.
The existence of a shadow zone, according to German seismologist Beno
Gutenberg (ɡuː t ə n bɛʁk), could only be explained if the Earth contained a
core composed of a material different from that of the mantle causing the
bending of the P-waves. To honor him, mantle–core boundary is called
Gutenberg discontinuity.
From the epicenter, S-waves are detected until 103 o, from that point,
S- waves are no longer detected. This observation tells us that the S-waves
do not travel all throughout the Earth’s body. There is a portion inside the
Earth that does not conduct the propagation of S-wave. Hence, knowing the
properties and characteristics of S-waves (that it cannot travel through
liquids), and with the idea that P-waves are bent to some degree, this portion
must be made of liquid, thus the outer core.
In 1936, the innermost layer of the Earth was predicted by Inge
Lehmann, a Danish seismologist. He discovered a new region of seismic
reflection within the core. So, the Earth has a core within a core. Based on
Figure 3 on page 8, we can say that the outer part of the core is liquid based
from the production of an S wave shadow and the inner part must be solid
with a different density than the rest of the surrounding material.
The size of the inner core was accurately calculated through nuclear
underground tests conducted in Nevada. Echoes from seismic waves
provided accurate data in determining its size.

Table 1 shows the relative thickness of the different layers of the Earth.

Table 1. Thickness of the Different Layers of the Earth

Layer Thickness in kilometers


Crust 40
Mantle 2900
Outer core 2200
Inner core 1278
Perform the following activity to test your understanding about seismic
waves.
Activity 1
Amazing Waves!
Objectives:
 Define seismic waves scientifically.
 Differentiate the different types of seismic waves.
 Recognize the importance of seismic waves in the study of the
Earth’s interior.

Procedure:

Using the given organizer, write the necessary information to complete


the concept about seismic waves.

SEISMIC WAVES

Definition

Main Types

Sub-types Sub-types

EPE Characteristics Characteristics Characteristics Characteristics

D Q1. Differentiate surface waves from body waves.

Q2. Which type of waves do you think were useful to seismologists


in their study of the Earth’s interior? Explain your answer.
The Composition of the Earth’s Interior
The Earth’s composition tells a story about itself. It gives us clues to its
past and proofs about the gradual and slow changes that it has undergone for
over 4.6 billion years.

Crust
Mantle

Outer Core
Inner Core

CO
Figure 4. Earth’s Cross Section

The Crust
The crust is the thinnest and the outermost layer of the Earth that
extends from the surface to about 32 kilometers below. Underneath some
mountains, the crust’s thickness extends to 72 kilometers. The Earth’s crust,
as gleaned from Figure 5 on page 12, is subdivided into two regions: the
continental crust and the oceanic crust.

https://mrb-science.wikispaces.com/Plate+Tectonics
Figure 5. The Continental and the Oceanic Crust
The continental crust is mainly made up of silicon, oxygen, aluminum,
calcium, sodium, and potassium. The thickness of the continental crust is
mostly 35-40 kilometers. Continental crust, found under land masses, is made
of less dense rocks such as granite.
The oceanic crust is around 7-10 kilometers thick which its average
thickness is 8 kilometers. It is found under the ocean floor and is made of
dense rocks such as basalt. The oceanic crust is heavier than the continental
crust.
The crust consists of two layers. The upper layer is composed of
granite and is only found in the continental crust. Below the granite is a layer
made mainly of basalt. This is found on both under the continents and the
oceans.
Table 2 shows the different elements that compose the Earth’s crust.
Table 2. Elements in the Earth’s crust
Element Percentage
Oxygen 46.60
Silicon 27.72
Aluminum 8.13
Iron 5.00
Calcium 3.63
Sodium 2.83
Potassium 2.59
Magnesium 2.09
Titanium 0.40
Hydrogen 0.14

The Mantle
Beneath the crust is the mantle, which extends to about 2900
kilometers from the Earth’s surface. It makes up about 80% of the Earth’s
total volume and about 68% of its total mass. The mantle is mainly made up
of silicate rocks, and contrary to common belief, is solid, since both S-waves
and P-waves pass through it.
The attempt to study the Earth’s mantle extended as far as studying
the rocks from volcanoes, simply because they were formed in the mantle.
Scientists also studied rocks from the ocean floor. They have determined
that the mantle is mostly made of the elements silicon, oxygen, iron and
magnesium. The lower part of the mantle consists of more iron than the upper
part. This explains that the lower mantle is denser than the upper portion. The
temperature and the pressure increase with depth. The high temperature and
pressure in the mantle allows the solid rock to flow slowly.
The crust and the uppermost part of the mantle form a relatively cool,
outermost rigid shell called lithosphere and is about 50 to 100 kilometers
thick. These lithospheric plates move relative to each other.
Beneath the lithosphere lies the soft, weak layer known as the
asthenosphere, made of hot molten material. Its temperature is about 300 –
800oC. The upper 150 kilometers of the asthenosphere has a temperature
enough to facilitate a small amount of melting, and make it capable to flow.
This property of the asthenosphere facilitates the movement of the
lithospheric plates. The lithosphere, with the continents on top of it, is being
carried by the flowing asthenosphere.

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EPED https://www.studyblue.com/notes/note/n/geography-terms/deck/4616076
Figure 6. The Lithosphere and the Asthenosphere

The Core
The core is subdivided into two layers: the inner and the outer core.
The outer core is 2900 kilometers below the Earth’s surface. It is 2250
kilometers thick and is made up of iron and nickel. The temperature in the
outer core reaches up to 2000oC at this very high temperature, iron and nickel
melt.
Aside from seismic data analysis, the Earth’s magnetic field
strengthens the idea that the Earth’s outer core is molten/liquid. The outer
core is mainly made up of iron and nickel moving around the solid inner core,
creating Earth’s magnetism.
The inner core is made up of solid iron and nickel and has a radius
of 1300 kilometers. Its temperature reaches to about 5000 oC. The extreme
temperature could have molten the iron and nickel but it is believed to have
solidified as a result of pressure freezing, which is common to liquids
subjected under tremendous pressure.

What tells us that the inner core is made up of iron?

Aside from the fact that the Earth has a magnetic field and that it must
be iron or other materials which are magnetic in nature, the inner core must
have a density that is about 14 times that of water. Average crustal rocks
with densities 2.8 times that of water could not have the density calculated for
the core. So iron, which is three times denser than crustal rocks, meets the
required density.

Some clues that the inner core and the outer core are made up of iron
include the following:

 Iron and nickel are both dense and magnetic.

 The overall density of the earth is much higher than the density of
the rocks in the crust. This suggests that the inside must be made up
of something denser than rocks.

 Meteorite analysis have revealed that the most common type is


chondrite. Chondrite contains iron, silicon, magnesium and oxygen;
some contains nickel. The whole earth and the meteorite roughly have
the same density, thus the Earth’s mantle rock and a meteorite minus
its iron, have the same density.
Activity 2
Our Dynamic Earth

Objectives:
• Describe the properties of the layers of the Earth.
• Tell the composition of the layers of the Earth.

Procedure:
1. Label the drawing corresponding to the Earth’s layers.
2. Describe the different layers of the Earth using symbols.
3. Choose from the response grid on the right the symbol that you need
to finish the figure on the left.
4. Draw the symbol/s in the corresponding layer of the Earth.

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Guide Questions:

Q3. What element is the most abundant in the Earth’s crust?

Q4. What elements make up most of the mantle?

Q5. What is the special feature of the upper mantle?

Q6. How did scientists come to know that the outer core is liquid?
Q7. What materials make up the inner core?
Q8. Is the inner core solid, liquid, or gas? What keeps it in this phase?

Q9. Compare the inner core and the outer core.

The Earth’s Mechanism

The Continental Drift

Have you had the chance to go to a mountain, stand on its peak and
look at the beauty that it offers? Do you think it looks exactly the same as
before? Perhaps you would think that it might be different - all plain, no
plateaus, no mountains. If it wasn’t the same 10 years ago, how much
different is it 10 million years ago, 100 million years ago?
In 1912, Alfred Wegener (pronounced as vey-guh-nuh r), a German
meteorologist, proposed a theory that about 200 million years ago, the
continents were once one large landmass. He called this landmass Pangaea,
a Greek word which means “All Earth.” Figure 7 shows how Pangaea evolved
into how the continents look today. This Pangaea started to break into two
smaller supercontinent called Laurasia and Gondwanaland during the
Jurassic Period. These smaller supercontinents broke into the continents and
these continents separated and drifted apart since then. Is this idea somehow
true? If you lived during Wegener’s time, will you believe him?
PERMIAN TRIASSIC
250 million years ago 200 million years ago

JURASSIC CRETACEOUS
145 million years ago 65 million years ago

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PRESENT DAY

pubs.usgs.gov
Figure 7. The Evolution of Pangaea
Wegener searched for evidences to support his claim. He noticed the
fit of the edges of the continents on the opposite sides of the South Atlantic.
His evidences to the Continental Drift Theory includes the distribution of
fossils in different continents, rock features, and ancient climates. Let us have
a further study on these evidences.

Evidence: The Continental Jigsaw Puzzle

Did it really start as one big landmass? It seems very impossible that
the seven continents, which are currently thousands of miles away from each
other were actually connected pieces of a supercontinent.
The most visible and fascinating evidence that these continents were
once one is their shapes. The edge of one continent surprisingly matches the
edge of another: South America and Africa fit together; India, Antarctica, and
Australia match one another; Eurasia and North America complete the whole
continental puzzle in the north.

Evidence from Fossils

Fossils are preserved remains or traces of organisms (plants and


animals) from the remote past. Fossilized leaves of an extinct plant
Glossopteris were found in 250 million years old rocks. These fossils were
located in the continents of Southern Africa, Australia, India, and Antarctica,
which are now separated from each other by wide oceans. The large seeds
of this plant could not possibly travel a long journey by the wind or survive a
rough ride through ocean waves.
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Source: http://pubs.usgs.gov/gip/dynamic/continents.html
Figure 8. Distribution of Fossils across Different Continents

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Figure 9. Glossopteris Fossil
Mesosaurus (shown in Figure 10) and Lystosaurus are freshwater
reptiles. Fossils of these animals were discovered in different continents, such
as in South America and Africa. It is impossible for these reptiles to swim over
the vast oceans and move from one continent to another. Fossils were also
found in Antarctica. Could it be possible that they existed in this region where
temperature was very low? Or could it be possible that, long before,
Antarctica was not in its current position?

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Source: www.busacagallery.com
Figure 10. Mesosaurus Fossil
The following activities will give you an idea how the Continental Drift
Theory was conceived.

Activity 3
Let’s Fit it!

Objectives:
 Find clues to solve a problem.
 Recognize how the Continental Drift Theory is developed.

Materials:
 old newspaper or magazine
 scotch tape

Procedure:
1. Do this activity in a group of five to six members.

2. Obtain a set of torn newspaper page or magazine page from your


teacher.
3. Try to fit the pieces together.
4. Use a tape to connect the pieces.

Q10. What features of the newspaper helped you to connect the


pieces perfectly?

Q11. How do the lines of prints or texts in the newspaper help you to
confirm that you have reassembled the newspaper/magazine
page?

Q12. Show proofs that the newspaper is perfectly reassembled.


Activity 4
Drifted Supercontinent!

Objectives:
 Tell the possible direction of motion of the continents as they drifted
away.
 Draw fossils of plants and animals as evidences found in the
present continents that will help solve the puzzle in the fitting of the
drifted continents.
 Reconstruct and describe Pangaea.
 Predict what will happen to the world as the continents continuously
move.

Materials:
 photocopy of the seven continents
 world map
 pair of scissors

Procedure:
1. Cut carefully the traces of the seven continents. Warning: Be careful
in using the scissors.

2. Sketch the dominant species of plants and animals found in the


continents before and after drifting away from each other.

3. Put the cut-outs together.

Q13. What do the Glossopteris fossils tell us about the early


positions of the continents?

Q14. If Glossopteris fossils were found in Antarctica, what was the


climate of this continent before?

Q15. If the climate and the position of a place are relative to each
other, where then was the initial location of Antarctica 250 million
years ago?

Q16. What does the presence of Mesosaurus fossils tell about the
initial location and positioning of South America, Africa, and
Antarctica?
4. Make sure that you put fitting edges of the continents side by side to
form the supercontinent Pangaea.

Q17. What clues are useful in reconstructing Pangaea?

Q18. Which continents do you think were neighbors before?

Q19. Is there a possibility that the current location of a continent


would be different 100 years from now?

Q20. Where do you think was the Philippines located during the time
that the Pangaea existed? Research on how the Philippine
islands emerged.

5. Compare Pangaea with the world map.

6. Now move one continent relative to its current location. Observe


carefully the direction of its motion as it assumes its current
location and position. Record your observation.

7. Do the same procedure to the other continents. Record your


observations.

Q21. If the continents will continue to move, try to predict the


Philippines’ location 100 million years from now.

Evidence from Rocks

Fossils found in rocks support the Continental Drift Theory. The rocks
themselves also provide evidence that continents drifted apart from each
other. From the previous activity, you have learned that Africa fits South
America. Rock formations in Africa line up with that in South America as if it
was a long mountain range.

How come these rock layers in different continents line up together with
layers that exactly matched?

The folded cape mountains of South America and Africa line up


perfectly as if they were once a long mountain range.
Coal Deposits

Coal beds were formed from the compaction and decomposition of


swamp plants that lived million years ago. These were discovered in South
America, Africa, Indian subcontinent, Southeast Asia, and even in Antarctica.
How is a coal bed formation possible in Antarctica?

The current location of Antarctica could not sustain substantial amount


of life. If there is a substantial quantity of coal in it, thus, it only means that
Antarctica must have been positioned in a part of the Earth where it once
supported large quantities of life. This leads to the idea that Antarctica once
experienced a tropical climate, thus, it might have been closer before to the
equator.

The Seafloor Spreading

The question as to how the drifting took place left the Continental Drift
Theory blurry. Despite the evidences presented by Wegener, his idea that the
continents were once joined together was not accepted by the scientific
society until the 1960s. He wasn’t able to explain how this drifting took place.
This made scientists conduct further studies in search for the answer.

During the 1950s and 1960s, new techniques and modern gadgets
enabled scientists to make better observations and gather new information
about the ocean floor. With the use of sonars and submersibles, scientists
had a clearer view of the ocean floors. They have discovered underwater
features deep within the ocean.

Scientists found a system of ridges or mountains in the seafloor similar


to those found in the continents. These are called mid-ocean ridges. One of
these is the famous Mid-Atlantic Ridge (Figure 11), an undersea mountain
chain in the Atlantic Ocean. It has a gigantic cleft about 32-48 km long and
1.6 km deep. The ridge is offset by fracture zones or rift valleys.
Source: huttoncommentaries.com
Figure 11. The Mid-Atlantic Ridge

In the early 1960’s, scientist Harry Hess, together with Robert Dietz,
suggested an explanation to the continental drift. This is the Seafloor
Spreading Theory. According to this theory, hot, less dense material from
below the earth’s crust rises towards the surface at the mid-ocean ridge. This
material flows sideways carrying the seafloor away from the ridge, and
creates a crack in the crust. The magma flows out of the crack, cools down
and becomes the new seafloor.
Overtime, the new oceanic crust pushed the old oceanic crust far from
the ridge. The process of seafloor spreading allowed the creation of new
bodies of water. For example, the Red Sea was created as the African plate
and the Arabian plate moved away from each other. Seafloor spreading is
also pulling the continents of Australia, South America, and Antarctica away
from each other in the East Pacific Rise. The East Pacific Rise is one of the
most active sites of seafloor spreading, with more than 14 centimeters every
year.
Rising magma

Figure 12. Diagram of Seafloor Spreading

In the place where two oceanic plates collide or where an oceanic


plate and a continental plate collide, a subduction zone occurs. As the new
seafloor is formed at the mid-ocean ridge, the old seafloor farthest from the
ridge is destroyed at the subduction zone.

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Figure 13. Subduction Zone

The rate of formation of a new seafloor is not always as fast as the


destruction of the old seafloor at the subduction zone. This explains why the
Pacific Ocean is getting smaller and why the Atlantic Ocean is getting wider.
If subduction is faster than seafloor spreading, the ocean shrinks. When the
seafloor spreading is greater than the subduction, then the ocean gets wider.
Findings that support Seafloor Spreading Theory:
1. Rocks are younger at the mid-ocean ridge.
2. Rocks far from the mid-ocean ridge are older.
3. Sediments are thinner at the ridge.
4. Rocks at the ocean floor are younger than those at the continents.

The Seafloor Spreading Theory contradicts a part of the Continental


Drift Theory. According to this theory, continents moved through unmoving
oceans and that larger, sturdier continents broke through the oceanic crust.
Whereas, the seafloor spreading shows that the ocean is the actual site of
tectonic activity.

Magnetic Reversal

Seafloor spreading was strengthened with the discovery that the


magnetic rocks near the ridge follow a pattern aside from the fact that rocks
near the ridge are remarkably younger than those father from the ridge.

A magnetic compass tells us directions on Earth. It also proves that the


Earth has a magnetic field. The needle of a magnetic compass usually points
to the North Pole of the Earth which is actually the South Magnetic Pole at
present.

The Earth’s magnetic field is generated in the very hot molten outer
core and has already existed since the birth of our planet. The Earth’s
magnetic field is a dipole, one that has a North Pole and a South Pole.

What is magnetic reversal? How does magnetic reversal happen and


how does it prove seafloor spreading? Magnetic reversal is also called
magnetic ‘flip’ of the Earth. It happens when the North Pole is transformed
into a South Pole and the South Pole becomes the North Pole. This is due to
the change in the direction of flow in the outer core.

Magnetic reversals happened many times in the past. The occurrence


of magnetic reversals can be explained through the magnetic patterns in
magnetic rocks, especially those found in the ocean floor. When lava
solidifies, iron bearing minerals crystallize. As these crystallize, the minerals
behave like tiny compasses and align with the Earth’s magnetic field. So
when magnetic reversal occurs, there is also a change in the polarity of the
rocks. This allowed scientists to visualize the magnetic stripes in the ocean
floor similar to Figure 14, and to construct a magnetic polarity time scale
similar to Figure 15.
http://www.yourdictionary.com/magnetic-reversal
Figure 14. Magnetic Reversal

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Figure 15. Magnetic Polarity Time Scale

Over the last 10 million years, there has been an average of 4 to 5


reversals per million years. New rocks are added to the ocean floor at the
ridge with approximately equal amounts on both sides of the oceanic ridge.
The stripes on both sides are of equal size and polarity which seemed to be
mirror images across the ocean ridge. What does this indicate? It indicates
that indeed, the seafloor is spreading.
Try the following activity to further explore what happens deep under the
ocean at the Mid-Atlantic Ridge.

Activity 5
Split and Separate!
(Adapted)

Objectives:
 Simulate and describe the seafloor spreading process.
 Realize the importance of the seafloor spreading process relative to
the Continental Drift Theory.

Materials:
• board paper
• bond paper
• colored pencil
• pair of scissors
• ruler

Procedure:
1. Using a colored pencil, draw stripes across one sheet of bond paper
parallel to the short sides of the paper. The stripes should vary in
spacing and thickness.

2. Fold the bond paper in half


lengthwise.

3. Write the word “Start” at the top


of both halves of the paper. It
should look like the figure on the
right.

4. Cut the bond paper in half along


the dashed line to form two strips.

5. Take the board paper and make


three (3) 11-cm long slits as
indicated in the illustration.

Illustration 1. Bond Paper


6. The two slits near the edges of the bond paper
should be both 11-cm from the center slit.

7. Put the two striped strips of paper together so


that the “Start” labels touch one another.

8. Insert the strips up through the center slit, then


pull them toward the side slits.

9. Insert the ends of the strips into the side slits.


Pull the ends of the strips as shown in the figure below and watch what
happens at the center slit.

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10. Practice pulling the strips through the slits until you can make the stripes
come up and go down at the same time.

Q22. What do the stripes in the paper represent?

Q23. What does the middle slit represent? What occurs in this region?

Q24. What is the role of the mid–ocean ridge in the movement of


lithospheric plates?

Q25. How does the new seafloor form at the mid-ocean ridge?

Q26. What process/es happen at the side slits?

Q27. Is the earth getting larger and wider when plates drift away
from each other? Explain briefly.
Now that you understand the Seafloor Spreading Theory, try the
following activity to find how fast the seafloor is spreading.

Activity 6

How fast does it go!


Adapted (Glencoe Earth Science student edition copyright 2002)

Objectives:
 Analyze a magnetic polarity map.
 Use legends and scales of the map properly.
 Calculate the rate of seafloor spreading using magnetic clues.

Materials:
 magnetic polarity map
 metric ruler
 pencil

Procedure:

1. Study the magnetic polarity map. You will be working only with normal
polarity readings, these are the peaks above the baseline on the top
half of the graph.

2. Place the long edge of the ruler vertically on the graph. Align the ruler
with the center peak 1 of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge.

3. Determine and record the distance and age that line up with the center
of peak 1 west. Repeat this process for peak 1 east of the ridge.

4. Calculate the average age and distance for this pair of peaks.
Magnetic polarity map

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5. Repeat steps 2 to 4 for the remaining pairs of normal polarity peaks.

6. Calculate the rate of movement in centimeters per year using the formula
Rate = distance / time.

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Q28. How far do the plates move away from each other every year?

Q29. If Africa is approximately 2400 km away from the Mid-Atlantic


Ridge, how long ago was it when Africa was directly at or
near the Mid-Atlantic Ridge?

Plate Tectonic Theory

What causes tectonic plates to move? This is one of the main


questions that has remained unanswered since Alfred Wegener proposed the
Continental Drift Theory.

The Plate Tectonic Theory provided an explanation about the


movement of the lithospheric plates. This theory evolved from the two former
theories and was developed during the first decades of the 20th century.

The Earth’s lithosphere is divided into several plates. As you have


already learned, these plates ride over the weak asthenosphere. There are
three types of plate movements – separation of two plates (divergent), collision
of two plates (convergent) and sliding past each other (transform).
What facilitates the movement of the plates? Heat is produced in the
core that produces convection in the mantle. This convection causes the plate
to move around. To further understand this process, try the following activity.

Activity 7

Push me up and aside!


(Adapted)

Objectives:
• Explain what causes the tectonic plates to move.
• Enumerate the factors that cause tectonic plates to move.
• Realize the importance of the creation of convection current
underneath the earth.

Materials:
• dropper
• food color
• 1000 mL beaker
• 700 mL water
• 3-5 small / light wood blocks
• hotplate/alcohol burner & tripod

Procedure:

1. Pour 700 mL of water into the beaker.

2. Place the beaker on a hotplate and heat it. Give ample time for the
water to heat up.

Warning: Make sure that you know how to operate a hotplate.


Wear heat resistant gloves to protect your hands.
In the absence of a hotplate, you can use an alcohol burner.

3. Add a few drops of food coloring to the water in the beaker.

4. Looking from the side of the dish, observe what happens in the water.

Q30. How does the food coloring behave?


Q31. What do you call this behavior?

Q32. Enumerate the factors that cause the formation of a current.

5. Put several light wood blocks in the center of the heated near to boiling
water.

Q33. What happens to the blocks? What does this resemble?

6. Illustrate your observations.

Convection Current

As a substance like water is heated, the less dense particles rise while
denser particles sink. Once the hot less dense particles cool down, they sink,
and the other less dense particles rise. This continuous process is called
convection current. This is exactly what happens in the Earth’s mantle. The
hot, less dense rising material spreads out as it reaches the upper mantle
causing upward and sideward forces. These forces lift and split the
lithosphere at divergent plate boundaries. The hot magma flows out of the
mantle and cools down to form the new ocean crust. The downward
movement of the convection current occurs along a convergent boundary
where the sinking force pulls the tectonic plate downward.

The convection currents rotate very slowly, as they move and drag the
plates along. Because of convection current, the tectonic plates are able to
move slowly along the tectonic boundaries, pushing each other, sliding past
each other and drifting away from each other. This process is further
illustrated in Figure 16 below.
Source: www2.chilton.k12.wi.us
Figure 16. Convection Current in the Mantle

As an oceanic crust moves away from a divergent boundary, it


becomes denser than the newer oceanic crust. As the older seafloor sinks,
the weight of the uplifted ridge pushes the oceanic crust toward the trench at
the subduction zone. This process is called ridge push.

Slab pull is the other possible process involved in the tectonic plate
movement. The weight of the subducting plate pulls the trailing slab into the
subduction zone just like a tablecloth slipping off the table and pulling items
with it.
Now that you understand what happens inside the Earth and its effects
on the Earth’s surface, you should be able to realize that the tectonic activities
at the surface just like volcanic eruptions and earthquakes are inevitable. You
should view the Earth as a dynamic planet and still the most fascinating
planet for it offers you a home that no other planet can. Since you can’t
prevent these tectonic activities from happening, the following performance
task will enable you to contribute meaningfully in minimizing the damage that
these phenomena can bring.
Performance Task

Goal
To design a scheme to inform local folks in your hometown about the
possibilities of earthquakes, tsunami, and other geologic activities in
your area

Rol
e A project engineer who wants to develop a new subdivision, a realtor
who sells a house & lot, a geologist visiting his/her hometown or simply
a student seeking to help the government.

Audience
People in your locality

Situation
You are to inform local folks in your hometown about the possibilities of
earthquakes, tsunami, and other geologic activities in your area. Most
especially, you must bring out in them the sense of being always ready
and prepared.

Product
Informative materials about ways to mitigate the effects of tectonic
activities-related disasters

Standards
You will be rated according to the following criteria:
Details and Information 4 points
Method of Presentation/Dissemination 4 points
Techniques 4 points
Accuracy 4 points
Feedback/Result 4 points
TOTAL 20 points
V. Summative Assessment

Answer the following questions.

1. In 1912, Alfred Wegener proposed a theory that the Earth is once


a single landmass. What is the name of the Mesozoic
supercontinent that consisted of all of the present continents?
a. Eurasia
b. Laurasia
c. Pangaea
d. Gondwanaland

2. Who were the two scientists who proposed the theory of seafloor
spreading in the early 1960s?
a. Charles Darwin and James Hutton
b. Harry Hess and Robert Dietz
c. John Butler and Arthur Smite
d. F. Vine and D. Mathews

3. Which of the following diagrams best illustrates the convection


occurring in the mantle?
a. c.

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4. During the 1960s, scientists were already equipped with gadgets
needed to explore the deep ocean. What discovery about the ocean
floor is associated with the seafloor spreading?
a. Mountains are denser than the mantle.
b. The rotational poles of the Earth have migrated.
c. The crust of the continents is more dense than the crust of the ocean.
d. The crust of the ocean is very young relative to the age of the crust
of the continents.

5. If the Atlantic Ocean is widening at a rate of 3 cm per year, how far (in
kilometers) will it spread in a million years?
a. 3 kilometers
b. 30 kilometers
c. 300 kilometers
d. 3000 kilometers

6. Which of the following increases with distance from a mid-ocean ridge?


a. the age of oceanic lithosphere
b. the thickness of the lithosphere
c. the depth to the sea floor
d. all of the above

7. Which of the following can you infer from the continuous movement of
the lithospheric plates over the asthenosphere?
a. All the continents will cease to exist.
b. All the volcanoes in the Philippines will become inactive.
c. The continents will not be located in the same place as they are now.
d. The islands of the Philippines will become scattered all over the
world.

8. If all the inner layers of the Earth are firm solid, what could have
happened to Pangaea?
a. It remained as a supercontinent.
b. It would have become as it is today.
c. It would have slowly disappeared in the ocean.
d. It would have stretched and covered the whole world.

9. Why does the oceanic crust sink beneath the continental crust at the
subduction zone?
a. The oceanic crust has a greater density.
b. The oceanic crust is pulled downward by Earth’s magnetic field.
c. The oceanic crust is pushed from the ridge.
d. The continental crust has a denser composition.
10. The lithospheric plates are believed to be moving slowly. What is the
driving force that facilitates this movement?
a. gravitational force of the moon
b. magnetic force at the poles
c. convection current in the mantle
d. the force of the atmosphere

B. Complete the concept map below about continental drift, seafloor


spreading, and plate tectonics.

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VI. Summary/Synthesis/Feedback
 The Earth is composed of three major layers: the crust, mantle, and
core which is subdivided into outer and inner core.
 The crust is the outermost and thinnest layer of the Earth.
 The mantle is the middle layer of the Earth. It makes most of the Earth’s
volume and mass.
 The crust and a part of the upper mantle make up the lithosphere. The
lithosphere is subdivided into portions called lithospheric plates.
 The asthenosphere is the weak layer of the mantle on which the
lithosphere floats.
 The outer core is made up of molten material and accounts for the
Earth’s magnetic field.
 The inner core is the deepest layer of the Earth. It is made up of solid
nickel and iron. The temperature in the inner core reaches as high as
5000oC.
 The speed, reflection and refraction properties of seismic waves are
used by scientists to study the structure and composition of the Earth’s
interior.
 The Continental Drift Theory of Alfred Wegener states that the
continents were once part of a large landmass called Pangaea which
drifted away from each other. The continents moved away from each
other towards their current positions.
 Alfred Wegener based his theory on evidences from fossils imbedded in
rocks and rock formations.
 Seafloor spreading is believed to occur as hot magma rises at the rift in
the mid-ocean ridge. This magma cools down and becomes the new
seafloor as it pushes the former.
 The old seafloor is destroyed at the subduction zone and melts inside
the mantle.
 The age of rocks and the magnetic stripes in the ocean floor support
the Seafloor Spreading Theory.
 The Theory of Plate Tectonics helps explain the formation and
destruction of the Earth’s crust and its movement over time.
 Scientists believe that the plates’ movement is due to convection
currents in the mantle.
Glossary of Terms

Asthenosphere soft, weak upper portion of the mantle where


the lithospheric plates float and move around

Continental Drift Theory states that all the continents were once one
large landmass that broke apart, and where
the pieces moved slowly to their current
locations

Convection current current in the mantle because of the heat from


the inner layers of the Earth, and is the force
that drives the plates to move around

Lithosphere the topmost, solid part of the Earth that is


composed of several plates

Lithospheric Plates the moving, irregularly-shaped slabs that fit


together to form the surface of the Earth

Mid-ocean ridge area in the middle of the ocean where a


new ocean floor is formed when lava erupts
through the cracks in the Earth’s crust

Mohorovičić the boundary that separates the crust and the


Discontinuity mantle
(Moho)

Plasticity the ability of solid to flow

Seafloor spreading process by which new ocean floor is formed


near the mid-ocean ridge and moves outward

Subduction the process in which the crust plunges back


into the Earth

Tectonics branch of geology that deals with the


movements that shape the Earth’s crust
References and Links
Printed Materials:

Borrero, Francisco et al. (2008). Earth Science: Geology, the Environment,


and the Universe. The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Department of Education, Bureau of Secondary Education. Project EASE
Integrated Science 1, Module 12: Inside the Solid Earth
Department of Education, Bureau of Secondary Education (2013). Science
– Grade 8 Learner’s Module. Vibal Publishing House, Inc.
Feather Jr.,Ralph et al. (2002). Glencoe Earth Science. The McGraw-Hill
Companies, Inc.
Maton, Anthea et al. (1999). Exploring Earth Science. Prentice Hall.
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dpbs

Photo credit: Yves Eli Yu

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