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3: Lithosphere

  • Page ID
    164486
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    • 3.1: Introduction to Geology
    • 3.2: Fundamentals of Plate Tectonics
    • 3.3: The Rock Cycle
      The rock components of the crust are slowly but constantly being changed from one form to another and the processes involved are summarized in the rock cycle. The rock cycle is driven by two forces: (1) Earth’s internal heat engine, which moves material around in the core and the mantle and leads to slow but significant changes within the crust, and (2) the hydrological cycle, which is the movement of water, ice, and air at the surface, and is powered by the sun.
    • 3.4: Geologic Hazards
    • 3.5: Floods
      Here’s a simple definition of a river flood: the occurrence of a flow of such magnitude that it overtops the natural or artificial banks in a reach of river channel. If a floodplain exists, here’s another way of defining a flood: any flow that spreads out over the floodplain.
    • 3.6: Mineral Resources and Mining
      Mineral resources, while principally nonrenewable, are generally placed in two main categories: metallic (containing metals) or nonmetallic (containing other useful materials). Most mining is focused on metallic minerals. A significant part of the advancement of human society has been developing the knowledge and technologies that yielded metal from the Earth and allowed the machines, buildings, and monetary systems that dominate our world today.
    • 3.7: Fossil Fuels- Formation and Mining
      Fossils fuels are extractable, nonrenewable sources of stored energy created by ancient ecosystems. The natural resources that typically fall under this category are coal, oil (petroleum), and natural gas. Coal formed from swamp vegetation, while oil and natural gas formed from marine microbes. In both cases, ancient organisms were transformed under high temperatures and pressures over millions of years.
    • 3.8: Soils
      Soil is the outer loose layer that covers the Earth's surface and is the foundation for agriculture and forestry. Soils consist of organic material, inorganic material, water and air, and they differ in proportions of clay, silt, and sand. A soil profile is characterized by horizontal layers called horizons. Climate, organisms, topography, parent material, and time influence soil composition and formation.


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