Showing posts with label erosion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label erosion. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 10, 2019

Landforms, Glaciers, and Erosion

We were lucky this year because we got to take the best Geology Field Trip ever—to the Canadian Rockies! We went to Banff and Jasper National Parks. It was amazing! You can read more about our trip here, but I'm including a few pictures of the mountains and glaciers we saw.

Below, you can read about a few activities we did to learn about these principles when we got back from our trip.
These glaciers were amazing to see! I love the blue tones of the ice as it gets thicker.
This is Athabasca Glacier—you can walk right up onto this one.
Gorgeous turquoise glacial lake
Perfect example of a glacial U-shaped valley!

One day we made play-dough (this is my favorite recipe) and the children made all the different kinds of landforms we'd been learning about: mountains, glaciers, moraines, volcanoes, and so forth.
A cave!
Fold mountain

A volcanic mountain range (from a hot spot). And I think there are some hoodoos in there too.
Teddy, very serious about his fold mountain…
and his sinkhole!
Fault-block and tectonic plate collision mountains

While in Canada, we stayed at a house by a river and found some beautiful river rocks.
They were already so smooth and flat and pretty! We collected a few…
And took them home to polish in our rock tumbler!
Didn't they turn out beautifully?

Another fun way to make landforms in with sand in a cake pan—then you pour water in to make deltas, rivers, lakes, etc. More pictures and ideas here.

Another activity we did was making some big blocks of ice and then experimenting with them on a nearby hill. We learned about glacial till, terminal and lateral moraines, cirques, glacial striations, etc. And, we had fun sliding down the hill on our ice blocks! :)
You can find more glacier activities here. And even more here.

Monday, May 30, 2016

Erosion, Mountains, Rivers, Canyons

It's hard when posting about this subject, as it was when teaching it, to sort things into discrete subjects. Erosion and weathering are inextricably linked with canyon formation, and mountains and plate tectonics go together, but erosion goes with mountains too, and you can't separate rivers and water erosion. I'll do my best to place related topics in the same post, but if you need more ideas, you can check the tags at the bottom of the post too.

We did several small activities to demonstrate water erosion and weathering. We poured a small stream of water into a pan filled with sediment, then inclined the pan and watched how the water moved. We could see the gradual wearing of a channel, as well as the spreading out of the water into as it slowed or the slope decreased. We talked about deltas and alluvial fans (here is a page with related activities), as well as meanders and oxbow lakes.

Next we observed the effects of wave erosion on coastlines. We buried several cylinders of clay (representing layers of harder rock) in a pile of sand (the softer rock). Then we filled the rest of the pan with water and gently rocked the pan back and forth to make waves:
As you can see, the waves gradually picked up the sediment on the coastline and deposited it farther out, leaving a smoothed-out coastline and exposing the rock stacks. Some of the stacks were even left standing alone in the water. We've seen lots of examples of these types of stacks when we go to the beach (Haystack Rock in Oregon, for example). Some even form arches.

We watched the carving action of water as it runs down a channel. We formed several "canyons" in the yard, and saw that the river deposits sediments downstream in deltas as well. This is an even better way to observe meanders, as a slope evens out.
And of course we made play-doh mountains of various sorts: fold mountains, fault-block mountains, volcanic mountains, etc.

You can find several other erosion and weathering activities at the bottom of this post.

Here are some illustrations of anticlines and synclines.

You can also see examples of mountains in the Plate Tectonics post.

Here's a cute landforms flipbook to make.
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