AP Environmental Science: Unit 4 Review - Earth Systems
AP Environmental Science: Unit 4 Review - Earth Systems
Plate Boundaries/Tectonics
plate tectonics - theory of the large scale motions of the plates located in Earth's lithosphere
convergent boundaries - when two plates collided, results in mountains, volcanoes, island arcs, earthquakes
divergent boundaries - when two plates move away from each other, results in seafloor spreading, rift valleys, volcanoes, earthquakes
transform boundaries - when two plates slide past each other, results in earthquakes
earthquakes occur at fault lines
Soil Formation
soils are formed when parent material is weathered and eroded
soils are usually categorized by horizons (layers)
o horizon - organic matter is various stages of decomposition
a horizon - (topsoil), overlying organic material
b horizon - (subsoil), accumulation of nutrients and metals
c horizon - (subsoil), most similar to parent material
Causes of Erosion
topography - slope of land, affects erosion
deforestation - lack or roots holding down soil
overgrazing - overeating of top layer of soil
pesticide/fertilizers - changes the chemical components of soil
tillage - turning/breaking top layer of soil
solutions - maintain plant cover, no till farming, strip/contour cropping or plowing
Soil Composition and Properties
water holding capacity - total amount of water soil can hold
soil texture triangle - diagram that allows for the comparison and identification of soil types based on the percentage of silt, clay, and sand it contains
Earth's Atmosphere
78% Nitrogen
21% Oxygen
1% trace gases
layers of Earth's atmosphere - troposphere, stratosphere, mesosphere, thermosphere, exosphere
troposphere -the layer of the atmosphere extending from the Earth's surface, all of Earth's weather occurs in this layer
stratosphere - layer of the atmosphere above the troposphere and bellow the mesosphere , contains the ozone layer
mesosphere - atmospheric layer above the stratosphere and below the thermosphere
thermosphere - atmospheric layer above the mesosphere
exosphere - the outermost region of a Earth's atmosphere
tilt of the Earth = seasons
rain shadow effect - region of land that has become drier because a higher elevation area blocks precipitation from reaching the land
Global Wind Patterns
coriolis effect - because the earth is spinning, although winds are traveling in a straight line, they seem to deflect or change direction. From their origin, wind deflects to the right in the N hemisphere & to the L in the S hemisphere
types of convection cells - Hadley, ferrel, polar
hadley cells - 0 - 30 degrees N & S
ferrel cells - 30 - 60 degrees N & S
polar cells - 60 - 90 degrees N & S
El Nino and La Nina
el nino and la nina- phenomena associated with changing ocean surface temperatures in the Pacific Ocean
normal conditions - winds flow from East to West, and push the warm water from South America over to Australia, water off the coast of S. America is cool. As the warm surface water leaves off the coast of S. America, it is replaced with cold, nutrient rich water
la nina - extreme version of normal conditions, trade winds from east to west speed up, pushing warm water even further away from the Pacific & the Americas and more towards Australia and Atlantic, unusually cool surface water temperatures along Americas’ coasts, hurricane activity in the Pacific declines but it increases in the Atlantic since it is unusually warmer
el nino - east to west trade winds in the tropics weaken or sometimes reverse direction, warm water is pushed to western coasts of the Americas and causes the surface water to heat up, cool water is unable to rise along Americas’ western coasts resulting in less food for predators and fisherman