Non-fiction: Dig This! Want to know what the world was like millions of years ago? Look to the rocks.

Similar documents
Courtney Stallmann. Jolene Wawrzyniak.

4 th Grade Science Unit C: Earth Sciences Chapter 6: Minerals and Rocks Lesson 1: What are minerals?

Earth s Resources. Earth s Surface

Non-fiction: Deep-Sea Detectives

Unit 9 Lesson 3 How Can Rocks Be Classified? Copyright Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company

Big News About Old Rocks

Chapter 4: Rocks and Their Transformations

4 th Grade PSI. Slide 1 / 107 Slide 2 / 107. Slide 3 / 107. Slide 4 / 107. Slide 5 / 107. Slide 6 / 107. The History of Planet Earth

SCI-5 KES 5.7 Geology Post-test Exam not valid for Paper Pencil Test Sessions

The Cycling of Matter. Day 1

Earth s Changing Surface Chapter 4

2 Igneous Rock. How do igneous rocks form? What factors affect the texture of igneous rock? BEFORE YOU READ. Rocks: Mineral Mixtures

Vocabulary Words. theory continental drift fault magma lava. weathering glacier erosion deposition delta

THIRD GRADE SCIENCE (SCIENCE3_1)

Name Date Period. Rock Cycle Webquest

All About Rocks. What Exactly Are Rocks? 298 words. Born from Magma: Igneous Rock 223 words. Layer After Layer: Sedimentary Rock 192 words

Eruption! Mexico's "Volcano of Fire" roars back to life. When will the next big explosion occur?

Question #1: What are some ways that you think the climate may have changed in the area where you live over the past million years?

11.4 The Rock Cycle. Rocks and Soils. Objective. Materials. Teacher Tip. Directed Instruction. Content. Introduction

6.E E Rock Cycle/Weathering/Soil

4.1 Act 2 Rock Cycle: Interactive Website Worksheet

The Norwood Science Center. Geology (Minerals) Grade 4

Dinosaurs roamed Earth millions of years ago. Some dinosaurs were as small as chickens. Others were larger than houses.

Rock Cycle Reader s Theater

1. In the block diagram shown here, which is the oldest rock unit?

Non-fiction: Cracking Up

water erosion lithosphere Describe the process of erosion and deposition. chemical weathering Dissolving limestone is an example of.

Who Am I? S6E5 Science Rocks

L wave Lahar Lava Magma

Back to the Big Question

Read Across America. Listen as I read for facts about Volcanoes. In the Shadow of the Volcano

Unit 2 Lesson 1 Geologic Change over Time. Copyright Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company

Tales of the Past. Source: Sci-ber Text with the Utah State Office of Education

Fill in the blank with the word that completes the sentence. Then, find that work in the puzzle.

GEOLOGIST S NOTEBOOK THREE ROCKS. Pre-Test/Anticipation Guide

Igneous. Sedimentary Transformation by heat and pressure

A mantle B magma C core D crust

Unit 3 Lesson 2 The Rock Cycle. Copyright Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company

Name Class Date. Study Guide for 7 th Grade Final Exam (Semester One)

Our Planet Earth. I nteractions of Earth Systems

Name: Geology Study Guide Date:

THE CHANGING SURFACE OF THE EARTH

McGraw-Hill Science 2000, Texas Edition TAKS Practice Test. Grade 3, Chapter 9 The Changing Earth. Name. Date

Plate Tectonics and fun Earth Stuff

Lesson Checkpoint: Name one animal that you know is extinct.

2 Igneous Rock. How do igneous rocks form? What factors affect the texture of igneous rock? BEFORE YOU READ. Rocks: Mineral Mixtures

Processes and Impact of Natural Hazards

Earth s History. The principle of states that geologic processes that happened in the past can be explained by current geologic processes.

Unit E: Planet Earth. Topic 2: The Rock Cycle and Characteristics of Rocks

2nd Grade Changing of Earth

GEOLOGY. What is geology?

Benchmark 3 Science Study Guide S6E5 A-Crust, Mantle, Core 1. What happens to the temperature as you travel to the center of the Earth?

Changes over Time: Destructive Processes

4th Grade. Slide 1 / 101. Slide 2 / 101. Slide 3 / 101. Earth Systems. Earth Systems Earth's Systems. Mechanical Weathering

Adapted by Karla Panchuk from Physical Geology by Steven Earle

ROCK TYPES LEAFLET ACTIVITY INFORMATION

core mantle crust the center of the Earth the middle layer of the Earth made up of molten (melted) rock

2nd Grade. Earth and Moon Cycles. Slide 1 / 133 Slide 2 / 133. Slide 3 / 133. Slide 4 / 133. Slide 5 / 133. Slide 6 / 133.

Weathering and Erosion Board Game Directions

Potential short answer questions: What is Pangea? Describe at least 4 pieces of evidence that led Wegener to suggest the theory of Continental Drift.

Plate Tectonics. Chapter 8

All About Rocks. What Exactly Are Rocks? 298 words. Born from Magma: Igneous Rock 223 words. Layer After Layer: Sedimentary Rock 192 words

Earth Science Unit 1 Review

4th Grade. Earth Systems.

Notepack 18 AiM: How can we tell the age of rock layers? Do now: Which Jenga piece was placed first to build this tower? Support your answer with

Non-fiction: Volcanoes

Fun with Fossils. Ask a Fossil

Section 1: Earth s Interior and Plate Tectonics Section 2: Earthquakes and Volcanoes Section 3: Minerals and Rocks Section 4: Weathering and Erosion

Plate Tectonics Practice Test

Name Date Class. Directions: Use the diagram below to answer question Florida Progress Monitoring and Benchmark Assessments

Geosphere Final Exam Study Guide

TAKE HOME EXAM 8R - Geology

UNIT 3 GEOLOGY VOCABULARY FLASHCARDS THESE KEY VOCABULARY WORDS AND PHRASES APPEAR ON THE UNIT 3 CBA

Rocks and the Rock Cycle. Banded Iron Formation

The Rock Cycle CSBLM7-I

Earth: The Water Planet

11.3 Heat A ffects Land

Angel International School - Manipay 1 st Term Examination November, 2015

abrasion the rubbing, grinding, and bumping of rocks that cause physical weathering (SRB, IG)

Spelling Pyramid. Mineral

Grade 7 Science Revision Sheet for third term final exam

Rocks. Geology: Slides 22-50

The Official CA State Science Education Standards for Earth Science K 8

6. The lithosphere is

Draw a picture of an erupting volcano and label using the following words/phrases: magma; lava; cools slowly; cools quickly; intrusive; extrusive

1. What is the definition of uniformitarianism? 2. What is the definition of organic? 4. What is the definition of inorganic?

KS3 Chemistry. 8H The Rock Cycle. 8H The Rock Cycle. Sedimentary rocks. Metamorphic rocks. Igneous rocks. The rock cycle. Summary activities

THE ROCK CYCLE & ROCKS. Subtitle

TEACHER BACKGROUND KNOWLEDGE. Surface Processes: Weathering and Erosion

E S V J O Y R T I M T Z A T I E N M X D L S T J M F C E S T D W A M P A M I N E R A L B O V K M C J K T K S L E C E E S U T K I

c) metamorphosis d) rock transformation a) melting and cooling b) heat and pressure a) igneous rock b) sedimentary rock

Plate Tectonics Tutoiral. Questions. Teacher: Mrs. Zimmerman. Plate Tectonics and Mountains Practice Test

State the principle of uniformitarianism. Explain how the law of superposition can be used to determine the relative age of rocks.

3. [ES 3] 1. [ST8.2] Some processes that shape Earth s surface are slow. Other processes are rapid. Which statement describes a rapid change?

A physical feature of the Earth s surface

Chapter 8: Lesson 1 Notes

A solar flare blasts away from the sun

Internet Interactive Rock Cycle

A Trip Through Geologic Time

Earth: Inside and Outside

Transcription:

Non-fiction: Dig This! Dig This! Fossil Find Want to know what the world was like millions of years ago? Look to the rocks. One hundred and fifty million years ago, one of the very first birds appeared on Earth. How do we know? Fossils. Fossils are the hardened remains of plants or animals that died long ago. Scientists recently discovered a fossil of a 150-million-year-old bird called Archaeopteryx (arkee- OP-ter-iks). It s not the first Archaeopteryx fossil to be found. However, the newly discovered fossil shows that Archaeopteryx had feet similar to those of the Getty dinosaurs. This fossil gives Archaeopteryx scientists more evidence that dinosaurs were the ancient ancestors of modern birds. Dead plants and animals usually break down and rot away, but sometimes their remains become fossils. Think about the Archaeopteryx that died millions of years ago. Its body may have settled to the bottom of a river or lake. Then layers of sand covered the body. The layers created a shell around the skeleton that kept it from breaking down or being eaten by other animals. Over millions of years, minerals in the water saturated the bones. Minerals are the solid materials that make up rocks. Eventually, minerals replaced all the chemicals in the bones. The bones had transformed into rocks, but they still looked like the bird s skeleton. Today, scientists can study fossils to look back at the history of Earth. Scientists who study fossils are called paleontologists. They have discovered fossils of ancient flowers, enormous dinosaurs, and other creatures that have been extinct for millions of years. Knowing what plant and animal life was like helps scientists understand what the environment was like in the past. 1 Article: Copyright 2007 Weekly Reader Corporation. All rights reserved. Weekly Reader is a registered trademark of Weekly Reader Corporation. Used by permission.

Non-fiction: Dig This! Many people, not just scientists, discover fossils all the time. Who knows what ancient life-form could be discovered next! Rock On! There are three main types of rock on Earth. Igneous rocks form when the melted rock inside Earth cools and hardens. These rocks have a uniform texture. They are made up of grains that are packed closely together. Igneous rocks can be smooth and shiny or filled with a lot of air bubbles. Sedimentary rocks develop from sediment. Sediment is made up of tiny pieces of sand that are worn away from mountains and other rocks. Those pieces settle at the bottom of rivers, lakes, and oceans. Over time, sediment builds up. Sedimentary rocks sometimes contain fossils. Metamorphic rocks are rocks that have changed. That means they started out as igneous or sedimentary rocks. Then heat and pressure from deep underground transformed them into a different kind of rock. The Active Earth Earth may seem solid and motionless, but it s actually moving and changing all the time sometimes slowly and sometimes with a bang. Earthquakes shake, volcanoes blast liquid rock, and weather wears away rock and land. Faults are cracks in Earth s upper layer, or crust. They form when two plates, or pieces of the crust, slide against each other. Earthquakes usually happen near faults. Volcanoes erupt when magma blasts through "hot spots" in Earth s crust. Magma is super hot liquid rock from deep within Earth. When magma reaches the surface, it is called lava. Volcanic hot spots are also found on the seafloor. In 2005, Hurricane Katrina slammed into the Gulf Coast of the United States. The hurricane caused erosion, the stripping away of land and soil. Over time, all rocks and land surfaces are worn down by flowing water or weather. 2 Article: Copyright 2007 Weekly Reader Corporation. All rights reserved. Weekly Reader is a registered trademark of Weekly Reader Corporation. Used by permission.

Name: Date: 1. What do paleontologists study? A fossils B birds C humans D plants 2. How does the author describe Earth? A solid and motionless B moving and changing C smooth and shiny D dangerous and lifeless 3. Which of the following conclusions about rocks is supported by the passage? A Fewer sedimentary rocks will form on Earth. B Scientists will no longer study rocks. C All rocks on Earth will become igneous rocks. D Rocks are constantly forming on Earth. 4. Read this sentence from the passage: These rocks have a uniform texture. Based on the text, the word uniform means A clothing B different C bumpy D even 5. Which statement best describes the central idea of this passage? A Scientists recently found a fossil of a 150-million-year-old bird. B Earth is covered with many types of rocks, plants, and animals. C Dinosaurs may be the ancient ancestors of modern birds. D People can learn about the history of Earth by studying fossils. 1

6. What are the three main types of rock on Earth? 7. How do you think the scientists who found the Archaeopteryx fossil felt? Give an example from the article that supports your answer. 8. The question below is an incomplete sentence. Choose the word that best completes the sentence. Scientists have discovered fossils of ancient flowers, dinosaurs, other creatures. A or B for C and D about 2

9. Answer the following questions based on the sentence below. Today, scientists study fossils to understand what Earth was like in the past. Who? scientists (do) What? When? Why? 10. Vocabulary Word: erosion: the stripping away of land and soil. Use the vocabulary word in a sentence: 3