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benjaming1

Geologic Change - 0 views

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    This article compares Earth's geologic features in its early years to Earth's geologic features today. In our lessons we review how geologic changes occurred and what they were.  This article also contained information on what the changes were and how they changed. 
harukas

Relative and absolute ages in the histories of Earth and the Moon: The Geologic Time Sc... - 0 views

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    This website is about the differences between absolute ages and relative ages. Also, it shows the geologic time scales.
aleksandera

Geologic Changes to the Very Good Earth | The Institute for Creation Research - 0 views

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    This site explains the geological changes over time
guglielmom

Geological game changer: When continents connected: New study shakes up understanding o... - 0 views

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    This article related to unit 2 lesson 1 in the way that is talks about geological change.
aleksandera

Geologic Time and Climate Change Science - 0 views

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    The article explains the concept of the geological time scale, it compares it to the climate change which had already occurred and  is occurring.
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    This site explains the relative dating.
harukas

Palaeos Proterozoic: The Paleoproterozoic Era - 0 views

  • It was during the Paleoproterozoic that small islands of crust were first stitched together to form the stable nuclei of the continents we know today.
  • India has a similar history. Similarly, India appears to be an amalgamation of four cratons.
  • The formation of Baltica - the continent which was to become Europe -- is one of the best-known examples. Baltica formed in the Paleoproterozoic from the fusion of three cratons
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  • For example, the core of South America formed around Amazonia in the Paleoproterozoic. The geologically stable core of South America is the Amazonian craton, roughly coterminous with northern and central Brazil and the inland areas of Venezuela, both Guyanas, and Suriname.
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    This website talks about the geography in the Paleoproterozoic era. There are many useful examples about the cratons or small islands connecting into a large continent. There are also explanations about the geochemistry during that time too. 
aurciuolo

The Archean Eon and the Hadean - 0 views

  • Online exhibits : Geologic time scale The Archean Eon and the Hadean The Archean eon, which preceded the Proterozoic eon, spanned about 1.5 billion years and is subdivided into four eras: the Neoarche
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    The Archean eon, which preceded the Proterozoic eon, spanned about 1.5 billion years and is subdivided into four eras: the Neoarchean (2.8 to 2.5 billion years ago)
amys123

Quaternary Period: Climate, Animals & Other Facts - 0 views

  • The Quaternary Period is a geologic time period that encompasses the most recent 2.6 million years — including the present day. Part of the Cenozoic Era, the period is usually divided into two epochs — the Pleistocene Epoch, which lasted from approximately 2 million years ago to about 12,000 years ago, and the Holocene Epoch, which began about 12,000 years ago
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    Information about the Quaternary period (landforms, climates, animals etc.)
lauran1

Greenhouse Earth | Climate change | Discovering Geology | British Geological Survey (BGS) - 1 views

  • During the Late Cretaceous, the high levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide heated up the Earth in the same way as they do today.
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    This talks about the late Cretaceous climate and about what gases there were.
aleksandera

Tectonics of the Triassic Period - 2 views

  • The climate of the Triassic era was influenced by Pangaea, its centralized position stradling the equator, and the geologic activity associated with its breakup. Generally speaking, the continents were of high elevation compared to sea level, and the sea level did not change drastically during the period. Due to the low sea level, flooding of the continents to form shallow seas did not occur. Much of the inland area was isolated from the cooling and moist effects of the ocean. The result was a globally arid and dry climate, though regions near the coast most likely experienced seasonal monsoons. There were no polar ice caps, and the temperature gradient in the north-south direction is assumed to have been more gradual than present day. The sea level rose as the rift grew between North Africa and southern Europe, resulting in the flooding of Central and South Europe; the climates of terrestrial Europe were hot and dry, as in the Permian. Overall, it appears that the climate included both arid dune environments and moist river and lake habitats with gymnosperm forests.
    • aleksandera
       
      This paragraph clearly explains the climate in the Triassic period and how it effected the animals in this period
  • rming on the Americas, North Africa was being split from Europe by the spreading rift. This division of the continents advanced further westward, eventually splitting eastern North America from North Africa.
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  • At the beginning of the Triassic period, the land masses of the world were still bound together into the vast supercontinent known as Pangaea. Pangaea began to break apart in the mid-Triassic, forming Gondwana
  • While Pangaea was breaking apart, mountains were forming on the west coast of North America by subduction of the ocean plates beneath the continental plates. Throughout the Middle to Late Triassic, mountain forming continued along the coast extending from Alaska to Chile.
  • The movement of the two resulting supercontinents was caused by sea floor spreading at the midocean ridge lying at the bottom of the Tethys Sea
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    Triassic Period - Landforms 
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    This explains the climate with a lot of detail. I find it similar to my Cretaceous period, when the Pangea completed it's breakup into present day continents (more or less).
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