Pub - Earth Science Handbook PDF
Pub - Earth Science Handbook PDF
Pub - Earth Science Handbook PDF
EARTH
SCIENCE
HANDBOOK
Revised Edition
THE FACTS ON FILE
EARTH
SCIENCE
HANDBOOK
Revised Edition
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The Facts on File Earth science handbook / The Diagram Group. — Rev. ed.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0-8160-5879-2 (acid-free paper)
1. Earth sciences—Handbooks, manuals, etc. I. Diagram Group.
QE5.F32 2006
550—dc22
2005044692
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VB DIAG 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
INDEX 265
SECTION
ONE
GLOSSARY
7
GLOSSARY abiogenesis – accretion
8
accretionary wedge – acid rain GLOSSARY
c
b
a
d
e
a Acid rain is produced by the release of sulfur dioxide (SO2) d Acid rain and snow fall on trees, killing them.
and nitrogen oxides (NOx) into the atmosphere from factories e Acid rain runs into river, killing fish and other organisms.
and power stations. f Acidified water runs into lake, killing fish.
b Gases combine with water to make sulfuric and nitric acids. g Acidified water leaches nutrients and heavy metals out of
c Acidic clouds can travel for long distances from the source. soil. These wash into the lake, polluting it.
9
GLOSSARY acid rocks – afforestation
acid rocks Igneous rocks containing more than 63% quartz, or rocks
with more than 10% visible quartz.
acid soil Soil with a pH of less than 7. Very acid soil has a pH of less than 5.
actinic radiation Radiation that produces a photochemical effect,
especially light and ultraviolet radiation. The Sun is a major
source of actinic electromagnetic radiation.
actinium series A series of decaying radioactive elements starting
with uranium-235 and ending in an isotope of lead. Each
member of the series derives from the radioactive decay of
its predecessor.
active layer In regions of permanently frozen ground known as
permafrost, this is the upper layer of soil that thaws in summer
while the soil below remains frozen.
adamantine luster Having the luster of a polished diamond.
adamellite granites Granites containing alkali and plagioclase
feldspars in roughly equal quantities.
adaptive radiation (or cladogenesis). A rapid phase of evolution in
which various species develop from a single ancestral form in
response to a number of different habitats.
adiabatic process Changes in temperature, pressure, and volume in a
quantity of air, that involve no exchange of energy or mass
with the surrounding atmosphere.
adit A tunnel driven horizontally into a slope, for mining minerals
or coal that are found as veins or seams in a mountain or hill.
adobe A fine, silty, often calcareous sedimented clay occurring in dried
desert lake basins. The source is eroded, wind-blown loess.
aeolian See eolian.
aerogenerator A windmill that converts the wind’s mechanical energy
into electricity. See wind power.
afforestation Large-scale tree planting. Afforestation provides useful
wood and tree roots that grip the soil, protecting steep slopes
from erosion.
10
African plate – air GLOSSARY
11
GLOSSARY air mass – alkali basalt
Frontal surface air mass A meteorological term for an extensive mass of air with
broadly uniform temperature and humidity. Depending on its
Warm air place of origin, it can be tropical or polar, and maritime or
continental. Major air masses may be millions of square miles
in horizontal extent. Vertically, an air mass may be
homogeneous in terms of heat and moisture as a result of
thorough mixing, or may preserve a high degree of
Cold air stratification. The vertical distribution of water vapor and heat
Air mass (warm front) determine the primary weather characteristics of an air mass.
air mass analysis (or frontal analysis). The analysis of the prevailing
air masses on a weather map and of the transition zones and
fronts that separate them. At the fronts between air masses, the
colder air mass usually passes under the warmer mass like a
wedge, resulting in a slope at the interface.
air pollution Contamination of the air, especially by smoke or gases
from vehicles, factories, and power stations. It can cause
diseases, kill plants, and damage structures.
albedo The proportion of incoming sunlight reflected by the Earth, the
atmospheric clouds, and the atmosphere, without causing
heating of the Earth’s surface. The Earth reflects an average of
about 30% of the light it receives from the Sun, but this covers
a range from about 8% from some grasses to 90% for fresh
snow. Thick cumulus clouds can reflect 80% of the light.
albic Of a very white soil with little or no clay or oxides on the sand
particles.
Aleutian trench The oceanic trench marking the boundary between the
Pacific lithospheric plate and the North American plate.
algal bloom The sudden appearance of a relative overgrowth of alga in
an aquatic ecosystem due to pollution that provides abnormal
enrichment for the growth of algae, or to a natural excess of
growth over consumption by fish and other water herbivores.
alkali basalt A fine-grained, dark-colored igneous rock containing
phenocrysts of olivine, augite, iron oxides, and plagioclase and
a higher proportion of sodium and potassium oxides relative to
quartz than other basalts.
12
alkali granites – alpine GLOSSARY
13
GLOSSARY altocumulus – anemometer
14
aneroid barometer – antecedent stream GLOSSARY
15
GLOSSARY anthracite – aquifer
anthracite A type of coal with very high carbon content. It forms from
coal subjected to high pressures and heat deep underground.
anticline A broad arch-like upfold in layered rocks, caused by their
compression. In an anticline, the oldest rocks are on the inside
of the arch. The opposite of a syncline.
anticlinorium A region, at least several miles across, containing
numerous anticlines and synclines.
anticyclone A large mass of high-pressure air bringing calm weather.
In temperate regions, this can be hot and sunny in summer, and
cold and clear or foggy in winter. An anticyclone is a source
region for an air mass and is often slow-moving or stationary.
Winds blow clockwise around an anticyclone in the Northern
Hemisphere, counterclockwise in the Southern Hemisphere.
(See also illustration on page 17.)
apatite The most abundant and widely distributed mineral of the
phosphate group. A usually green or gray-green
fluorophosphate or chlorphosphate of calcium, with a hardness
of 5, that occurs as an accessory mineral in igneous rock and
pegmatites. Apatite is used as a phosphate fertilizer.
aphelion The point in a planet’s orbit farthest from the Sun.
aphotic Without light.
aphotic zone That part of the open-ocean environment that receives
insufficient sunlight to allow photosynthesis to occur. The zone
exists at all depths below about 160–320 feet (50–100 m)
varying with the latitude and seasons.
Appalachian orogenic belt A belt extending from Newfoundland to
Alabama that has undergone compressional tectonics, resulting
Aquifer in an upthrust land form.
aquamarine Beryl.
aquifer A water-bearing, permeable, and porous rock mass or layer
through which ground water moves and which is capable of
storing considerable volumes of water. Aquifers have
Aquifier Impermeable impermeable rock below them and may or may not have an
rock layer impermeable layer above them. See also artesian basin.
16
Arabian plate – Archean era GLOSSARY
Anticyclone in cross-section
Converging winds
Diverging winds
17
GLOSSARY Archeocetes – argillaceous rocks
18
arid – astronomical unit GLOSSARY
19
GLOSSARY atmosphere – atmospheric window
atmospheric layers The layer closest to the Earth, and the region of
187 miles the weather, is called the troposphere. Above this is the
(300 km) stratosphere, which extends from about 6–10 miles to about
31 miles (10–16 km to 50 km). The mesosphere extends above
the stratosphere from 34 miles (55 km) to about 50 miles
(80 km), and contains the mesopause and most of the D layer,
124 miles
a region of low ionization. Above this is the thermosphere,
(200 km)
which extends from 50 miles (80 km) to the edge of the
atmosphere. This layer receives powerful radiant energy
directly from the Sun and shows phenomena such as the
62 miles aurora. Finally, the highest part of the atmosphere, the
(100 km) exosphere, has very few molecules with appropriate velocities
Mesosphere
29 miles
Stratosphere
to escape into outer space.
(50 km)
Troposphere atmospheric pressure Pressure exerted by a planet’s atmosphere
because of its weight. Atmospheric pressure and density both
decrease rapidly, and roughly exponentially, with altitude.
Atmosphere
Atmospheric pressure is low in cyclones and high in
anticyclones.
atmospheric radiation Infrared radiation emitted or transmitted by
the atmosphere.
atmospheric window The narrow band of wavelengths of infrared
radiation from the Earth that is only minimally absorbed by
20
atoll – autumn GLOSSARY
water vapor in the atmosphere and that may escape into space
unless absorbed by clouds.
atoll A ring-shaped coral reef enclosing a lagoon. Atolls form in the
tropics on the subsiding rims of collapsed volcanoes.
atom The invisible, tiny basic unit of matter in a chemical element.
Atoms themselves consist of still smaller subatomic particles.
See also proton, neutron, electron. Atoll
atomic energy See nuclear energy.
augen A lens-like or eye-like concentration of feldspar or quartz
crystals often found in gneisses.
aureole The zone around an igneous intrusion in which the local rocks
have suffered metamorphism through heat.
aurora An electrical discharge producing curtains of light, seen in
higher latitudes in the night sky.
authigenesis The crystallization of minerals within a sediment during
or after its deposition.
autochthon A large body of rock that has remained at the site of its
formation. Compare allochthon.
automatic weather station A collection of meteorological measuring
and recording instruments capable, without human
intervention, of transmitting data on temperature, pressure,
humidity, wind speed and direction, etc. to a central point.
autumn (or fall). In temperate zones, the season between summer and
winter.
Authigenesis
Precipitated
Spaces mineral
21
GLOSSARY avalanche – backwash
22
badlands – base level GLOSSARY
23
GLOSSARY base metal – bathyscaphe
Living coral
High water
Low water
base metal Any of the common metals, such as tin, copper, and lead,
as distinct from the precious metals, such as platinum, gold,
and silver.
basic Of igneous rocks that contain olivine, pyroxines, and
calcium-rich feldspars but no quartz.
basin (1) An area in which the rock has a natural concavity toward a
lowest point. Geological basins may be hundreds of miles wide
and can determine geological features such as sedimentary rock.
(2) An area drained by a river and its tributaries.
batholith A large dome-shaped, deep-seated, intrusive body of igneous
rock of which the lower extremity cannot be determined.
Batholiths are often of granite.
bathyal zone The region between the edge of the continental shelf and
the floor of the ocean.
bathymetry Measurement and mapping of the floor of the ocean by
means of multiple depth measurements.
bathyscaphe A submarine designed for exploration of the depths of
the ocean.
24
bathythermograph – Benioff zone GLOSSARY
25
GLOSSARY benthic – biodegradability
26
biogenic – biosphere GLOSSARY
Orbit of Sirius
Barycenter
(common center of gravity)
Or
bit
of w
h ite
d wa r
f
27
GLOSSARY biostratigraphic unit – bornite
28
bort – breeze GLOSSARY
29
GLOSSARY brine – caliche
6.4–50 kmh). Daily land and sea breezes in coastal areas result
from the unequal rates at which sunshine heats land and sea.
brine Salty groundwater, often found in and around rocks with a
high salt content.
brown coal Coal formed from peat. It represents an early stage in coal
development between peat and bituminous coal.
brucite The mineral magnesium hydroxide occurring usually in
plate-like crystals.
Bryozoa A phylum of simple marine animals that form lace-like
branching or spiral colonies on the surface of shells, rocks, and
other objects.
bund (1) An artificial ridge between fields.
(2) An embankment, dam, or quay.
butte A small, steep-sided hill with a flat top, formed when part of a
mesa erodes away, leaving the butte, which is protected from
erosion by a resistant hard top rock. A butte is smaller than a
mesa and a mesa is smaller than a plateau. All three have a
similar structure. See mesa.
calaverite A mineral of the compound gold telluride. Gold most
commonly occurs as the native metal.
Butte calcareous Composed of, or relating to, calcium carbonate.
calcite A form of calcium carbonate that is a major ingredient in
chalk, limestone, and marble.
calcium A silvery white metallic element. It occurs naturally only as
part of a chemical compound.
calcium carbonate A chemical compound consisting of carbon and
oxygen, and occurring as aragonite and calcite.
caldera A huge bowl-shaped volcanic crater, typically several miles
across and with a steep inner slope. Calderas result from the
explosion or subsidence of a volcano’s original cone.
caliche A dull calcite deposit, derived from groundwater, that occurs in
some areas of low rainfall.
30
Cambrian period – carbonates GLOSSARY
Cambrian period The first period (543–490 million years ago) of the
Paleozoic era. Multicellular organisms originated and became
plentiful in Cambrian times.
canyon A deep, steep-sided, long valley cut by running water in a region
that is otherwise dry. Rivers crossing dry regions form canyons
by cutting down through the rocks. Rivers crossing once exposed
continental shelves cut what are now submarine canyons scarring
continental slopes. Ocean canyons on continental slopes are also
believed to be cut out by local currents.
cape A pointed mass of land jutting into the sea.
cap rock A large boulder balanced, often precariously, on top of a
slender pillar of rock, resulting from the erosion of the softer
rock under the boulder.
carbon A nonmetallic element, noted for the enormous number of
compounds it can form because of its valency patterns and the
many ways carbon atoms can link in chains or rings. Carbon is
essential to life and is the basis of the chemistry of almost all
living organisms. Organic chemistry is the chemistry of
carbon. Pure carbon occurs as the minerals diamond and
graphite and as the powdered carbon black. In geology, carbon
is important for the carbonates it can form with metals, as in
the calcium carbonate of limestones and dolomites.
carbonaceous Of rocks that contain carbon.
carbonaceous chondrite A dull, black, stony meteorite, rich in
carbon but low in metals.
carbonado See bort.
carbonate minerals Minerals that are a major feature of sedimentary
rocks and are found mainly in limestones and dolomites, the
most abundant being calcium carbonate or calcite. Aragonite
has the same formula as calcium carbonate but is less stable.
Dolomite is a carbonate of calcium and magnesium.
carbonates Compounds containing chemically combined carbon and
oxygen atoms. Carbonates are the main ingredients in
limestone, dolomite, and aragonite.
31
GLOSSARY carbon cycle – catastrophism
32
cave – cementation GLOSSARY
Earth
Ecliptic
Sun
Celestial equator
Celestial sphere
33
GLOSSARY Cenozoic era – channel
34
chart – chlorophylls GLOSSARY
35
GLOSSARY Chlorophyta – cirrostratus
36
cirrus – climatology GLOSSARY
ice crystals may produce a halo around the Sun or Moon when
these are seen through this cloud.
cirrus Wispy, high-level clouds made of ice crystals. They are often
drawn out into “mares’ tails” by powerful winds.
citric acid cycle Another name for the Krebs cycle, by which energy
is transferred from the oxidation of food materials to ATP so
that it can be made available for all the complex metabolic
processes occurring in living cells.
cladogenesis See adaptive radiation.
clast Any weathered fragment of rock.
clastic Consisting of broken rock fragments or organic residues that
have been transported from their point of origin.
clastic rock Rock formed from the broken fragments of older ones.
Clastic rocks include conglomerates and sandstones.
clay A fine-grained sedimentary rock made of tiny, flaky crystals.
Clays tend to be plastic when wet and hard or powdery when
dry. They are porous but impervious.
clay mineral Any of a group of chemically related aluminum silicates
of very small crystal size that form a fine-grained mass that
remains plastic when wet but becomes hard when allowed to
dry or when heated (fired). The most important clay minerals Climate
belong to the kaolinite, chlorite, hydrous mica, smectite, talc, Polar
and vermiculite groups.
Temperate
cleavage (1) The tendency of some sedimentary and metamorphic
rocks to split along parallel lines of weakness. Tropical
(2) The tendency of crystals to split along planes of weakness
determined by the crystals’ molecular structure.
cliff A very steep rock face, such as sea cliffs and gorges.
climate The average weather of a region, locality, or larger area as
measured for all seasons over a number of years.
climatology The scientific study of climate. Climatology covers much
more than simply the description of climate and climatic
37
GLOSSARY clints – coccoliths
38
col – condensation GLOSSARY
39
GLOSSARY cone – continental rise
Ash and with water vapor, droplets of water form around condensation
cinder cone nuclei such as particles of salt, dust, and the like.
cone A hill or mountain that tapers from a broad round base to a
narrow circular apex. Most volcanoes are cone-shaped.
conglomerate Any sedimentary rock containing smooth, rounded rock
Cone fragments (clasts) greater than 2 mm in diameter embedded in
the fine-grained matrix, as of sandstone or limestone. Such a
rock is known as a rudaceous rock.
conic projection A map projection made as if lines of latitude and
longitude project from a globe onto a paper cone that touches
one or two lines of latitude and has its apex over one Pole.
Conic projections can be designed to show distances
accurately.
conservation Protection of the environment by careful management of
natural resources.
constellation An apparent grouping of stars.
contact metamorphism (or thermal metamorphism). Metamorphism
in igneous intrusions resulting from raised temperature alone.
continent One of the Earth’s major landmasses. Continents occupy
about 29% of the Earth’s surface.
continental crust The material forming the continents. Continental
crust is thicker and less dense than oceanic crust, and it
contains more complex rocks.
continental drift The hypothesis that continents have moved relative
to each other over the Earth’s surface. This was based,
initially, on the observation that the west coast of Europe and
Africa would fit neatly into the east coast of the Americas.
Although at first derided, the hypothesis has gained
considerable support from the growing evidence that plate
tectonics is a reality.
continental rim The rim of the continental shelf surrounding a
continent and forming its true but submerged structural edge.
continental rise The gentle gradient at the foot of a continental slope.
It consists of sediment that has slid down the slope.
40
continental sea – core GLOSSARY
41
GLOSSARY Coriolis effect – covalent bonding
Cold air
Condensation level
Warm air
Movement of
relatively warm
moist air
42
crag and tail – cuesta GLOSSARY
crag and tail A type of hill found in glaciated areas. One side is a
short, steep slope of hard rock (the crag); the other side is a
long, gentle slope of soft rock (the tail). The crag resisted
glacial erosion and protected the tail.
crater (1) A circular depression, usually with a raised rim, produced
by meteorite impact on a planet or moon.
(2) A funnel-shaped hole in a volcanic cone, produced by
volcanic eruption.
crater lake A lake occupying the crater of an extinct or dormant volcano.
craton An ancient part of a continent that has not been deformed by
mountain-building activity.
creep The gradual downslope movement of soil or rock fragments,
caused by gravity. Creep is one of the forms of mass-wasting.
Cretaceous period The last period (144–65 million years ago) of the
Mesozoic era. Continents drifted apart and dinosaurs
diversified greatly before becoming extinct.
crevasse A deep crack in a glacier. Crevasses form where the valley
floor suddenly steepens or widens.
cropland Arable farmland.
crop rotation Growing different crops in alternate years. Crop rotation
helps preserve soil fertility. Crust
43
GLOSSARY cumulonimbus – dam
44
dating – Decapoda GLOSSARY
Cyclone in cross-section
Diverging winds
45
GLOSSARY decay – dendrochronology
also used for the order of cephalopods that includes the squids
and cuttlefishes.
decay The spontaneous change of a radioactive element into another
element with the emission of particles or photons. In the
process, the atomic number may rise or fall. The half-life of
the element is the time taken for half the element to decay.
deciduous Of plants that shed their leaves each growing season. By
limiting transpiration (water loss), this helps them to retain
water. Most woody plants in temperate climates are deciduous.
declination A star’s angular distance in degrees north or south of the
celestial equator: the astronomical equivalent of terrestrial
latitude.
deflation The windblown transportation of dust and sand in dry lands.
Dust and sand scour some desert surfaces, but dust blown from
deserts and the edges of ice sheets can settle as fertile deposits
called loess. See also deflation hollow, loess.
deflation hollow A depression scoured in a desert surface by
windblown sand and dust.
deforestation Clearing land of a forest by burning or chopping down
trees. Most deforestation occurs where people replace forests
with farmland.
deformation Faulting, folding, tilting, or other changes in rocks
affected by movements in the Earth’s crust.
delta An area of low, flat, often fan-shaped land at a river mouth. A
delta is built out into a lake or sea by sediments dumped by a
river that divides many times, crossing the delta as streams
called distributaries.
dendritic drainage pattern A river system where the main river and
its tributaries resemble the trunk and branches of a tree.
dendrochronology A method of dating using changes in the annual
growth rings of trees in the same area caused by local climate
Dendritic drainage pattern
changes. Wide rings occur in rainy seasons when growth is
rapid; narrow rings occur in dry seasons.
46
denitrification – dew point GLOSSARY
47
GLOSSARY diabase – disconformity
48
disphotic – drizzle GLOSSARY
49
GLOSSARY drought – earthquake
50
Earth science – ecosystem GLOSSARY
51
GLOSSARY electrical and electromagnetic exploration – eolian process
52
eon – erosion GLOSSARY
53
GLOSSARY erratic – escarpment
a Sun’s rays
b
a North Pole Sun
Earth’s orbit Sun’s rays
b Arctic Circle a
(66°30'N)
equator
Night Earth’s orbit
Day
Earth’s b
orbit Sun’s rays
Sun
Sun’s rays
equator
Sun’s rays
54
esker – exosphere GLOSSARY
55
GLOSSARY extinction – fault
56
fault-block – flint GLOSSARY
57
GLOSSARY flood – fold
58
folding – fringing reef GLOSSARY
59
GLOSSARY front – gas
front The sloping boundary between masses of cold and warm air
and hence of air of different density. A front is a long, sloping
zone in the troposphere, featuring large changes of temperature
and wind speed. So the movement of a front past a fixed
location causes a rapid change in the weather at that point,
with sudden changes in temperature and wind force.
frontal analysis See air mass analysis.
frost (1) Subfreezing conditions that can kill certain plants.
(2) Frozen particles of moisture on the ground, trees, etc.
frost action The mechanical weathering process caused by the
freezing and thawing of water in pores, cracks, and other
openings in rocks, mainly near the surface. Water expands
when it freezes, so a water-filled crack is exposed to
considerable expansive forces as a result of frost. This results
in fractures and flaking in rocks and in the movement and
stirring of soil. A freezing cycle can cause considerable
Frost action
erosive action in a single night.
fumarole A small hole in the ground, emitting steam and other hot
volcanic gases.
Gas pockets gabbro A dense, dark, coarse-grained intrusive rock largely consisting
of plagioclase feldspar and pyroxene; the intrusive equivalent
of basalt.
galaxy A grouping of billions of stars and interstellar material in
space. Gravity holds it together.
gale A very strong wind, registering force 8 or more on the
Beaufort scale.
gangue Valueless minerals in ore.
gangue minerals Those parts of an ore deposit that are of no
commercial value but cannot be avoided in mining and must be
separated from the wanted ores.
gas Natural gas is a fuel consisting of methane and other
hydrocarbons. It forms from the decay of organic substances
and occurs in rocks underground where it may overlie
Gas petroleum.
60
Gastropoda – geoelectricity GLOSSARY
61
GLOSSARY geography – geomorphology
62
geophysical exploration – glacial geology GLOSSARY
63
GLOSSARY glacial phase – globular cluster
64
GMT – granodiorite granites GLOSSARY
65
GLOSSARY grassland – greenhouse effect
66
greenhouse gases – groundwater GLOSSARY
67
GLOSSARY groyne – hailstone
groyne A wall or sturdy fence jutting out across a beach from the land.
Groynes help to stop longshore drift moving sand and shingle
away from the beach.
gulf A coastal inlet larger than a bay and penetrating more deeply
into the land.
gully A narrow channel worn into a slope by running water,
especially by runoff from heavy rainfall in semiarid regions.
Gullies abound in land prone to soil erosion.
Gutenberg discontinuity The point 1,800 miles (2,900 km) deep
where seismic S waves stop moving down through the Earth.
Named for American seismologist Beno Gutenberg, it marks
the outer rim edge of the Earth’s core.
guyot A flat-topped submarine mountain. Guyots are subsiding
volcanic islands. Their summits were beveled by waves as they
sank below sea level. (See also illustration on page 69.)
gypsum A mineral or rock made of calcium sulfate and water.
Gypsum is an evaporite formed on the floors of seas that
dried up.
hachures Short lines drawn on some maps to indicate mountains and
hills. They run up and down slopes. The steeper the slope, the
thicker or closer together the hachures appear.
Hadean eon The first eon (4.5–4.0 billion years ago) in the Earth’s
history. The Earth’s surface was then hot and subjected to
heavy bombardment by meteorites. Life as we know it had
not appeared.
Hadley cell The tropical part of the Earth’s atmospheric circulation. It
consists of heated air rising from the equator, spreading north
and south, cooling and descending about 30° north and south
of the equator, and then, as the trade winds, flowing back
toward the equator.
hail Precipitation consisting of ice pellets called hailstones. Hail
occurs during thunderstorms.
hailstone A pellet formed of concentric layers of ice that have
accumulated from water droplets freezing inside a
cumulonimbus cloud.
68
halide – headland GLOSSARY
69
GLOSSARY headstream – hogback
70
Holocene epoch – horst GLOSSARY
Holocene epoch The second part, from 10,000 years ago to the
present, of the Quaternary period. Holocene (recent) time
covers the climatic phase since the melting of the north’s
Pleistocene ice sheets.
homeostasis The maintenance of constant conditions in a biological
or electronic system by automatic feedback mechanisms that
counter trends away from the designated fixed limits of
normality.
hominid Any organism of human-like general characteristics.
Homoptera An order of sucking insects, allied to the Hemiptera, that
includes aphids, leaf-hoppers, lantern flies, harvest flies, spittle
bugs, and cicadas.
horizon (1) The line where sky and land or sky and sea seem to meet.
The higher your viewpoint, the further away the horizon
appears.
(2) A layer of soil. Many soils have three horizons: the topsoil
or A-horizon, the subsoil or B-horizon, and the C-horizon of
broken bedrock mingled with clay and sand. See subsoil; soil;
regolith; topsoil.
horn A steep-sided pyramidal mountain peak formed by the
backward erosion of the headwalls of several cirques. The
Matterhorn is a world-famous example. See also arête.
hornblende Calcium-rich silicates: a group of amphibole minerals,
common in metamorphic and igneous rocks.
hornfels A granular, fine-grained, flinty type of metamorphic rock Horn
produced from other rocks subjected to very high temperatures
under low pressure.
horse latitudes Subtropical belts of atmospheric high pressure; calm
regions of descending air located between the trade winds and
westerlies.
horst A high block of land between parallel faults, usually long as
compared to its width, caused by the block having risen
relative to the land on either side. Horsts may have lengths and
upward displacements of only a few inches, though there are
71
GLOSSARY hot spot – hydrologic cycle
72
hydrology – hypermelanic GLOSSARY
73
GLOSSARY ice – igneous rock
74
impact crater – interstellar matter GLOSSARY
75
GLOSSARY intrusive – isobar
76
isohyet – jet stream GLOSSARY
77
GLOSSARY joint – Krebs cycle
78
K-T boundary – latitude GLOSSARY
K-T boundary The short geological period at the junction between the
Cretaceous and the Tertiary periods, about 65 million years
ago, which saw the extinction of the dinosaurs together with a
major proportion of the living things on Earth. The cause of this
extinction remains uncertain.
laccolith A lens-shaped mass of intrusive igneous rock that pushes
overlying sedimentary rocks into a dome.
lagoon A shallow area of water partly or wholly cut off from the sea by
a low-lying strip of sand, shingle, or coral that forms a spit, bar,
or atoll.
lake A large sheet of water surrounded by land, or, more rarely, ice.
So-called land-locked seas such as the Caspian Sea are really
giant lakes.
landfill Disposal of hazardous or other waste by tipping it in a hole in
the ground. Consequences can be an explosive buildup of
underground methane gas and contamination of water supplies.
landform A distinctive natural configuration of the land surface.
landslide The sudden slide down a slope of a mass of rocks or soil.
Landslides can happen when water lubricates a line of
weakness in rock.
land use The economic use to which land is put. For instance, land may
be classified as cropland, grassland, or forest.
lateral erosion The gnawing away of the banks of a meandering river
by the flow of water. Lateral erosion chiefly occurs where a 90°
strong flow of water undermines the bank on the outer side of 75°
60°
each bend.
45°
lateral moraine A line of rocky rubble lying on one side of the surface 30°
of a valley glacier. It results from stones and rocks falling onto 15°
the glacier from the steep slopes above. A similar lateral
0°
moraine occurs on the glacier’s other side.
15°
latitude Location north or south of the equator. Latitude is measured 30°
from the center of the Earth in degrees north and south of the 45°
equator. The equator’s latitude is 0°. The Poles are 90° north 60°
79
GLOSSARY Laurasia – lightning
80
light-year – lithosphere GLOSSARY
81
GLOSSARY little ice age – lopolith
82
Love wave – magnetic exploration GLOSSARY
83
GLOSSARY magnetic field – manganese nodule
Attraction magnetic field (or geomagnetic field). Imaginary flux lines (lines of
magnetic force) curved around the Earth between its north and
N S S N
south magnetic poles. This magnetic field results from a
dynamo effect created by the rotation of the Earth’s crust
Repulsion and the mantle around the Earth’s core.
Magnetic field magnetic poles Locations in the world’s far north and far south to
which a magnetic compass needle points. They do not coincide
with the geographical Poles, and their locations vary through
time.
magnetic reversal A reversal of the Earth’s magnetic field, where
north and south magnetic poles switch places. Records of past
magnetic reversals are alignments of magnetized particles in
rocks formed at the time.
magnetometer An instrument measuring the strength of a magnetic
field. Its detection of local variations in the Earth’s magnetic
field can help prospectors find mineral deposits.
magnetosphere A roughly doughnut-shaped region in space
containing the Earth’s magnetic field and magnetically
trapping or deflecting charged particles. It extends 40,000
miles (64,400 km) beyond the Earth. Saturn, Jupiter, and
Uranus are among other planets known to have
magnetospheres.
magnitude (1) In astronomy, a star’s brightness, measured as either
absolute magnitude or apparent magnitude (brightness in the
sky) as seen from the Earth.
(2) In geophysics, the energy released by an earthquake.
main sequence On a Hertzsprung-Russell diagram, the region where
most stars (i.e. the Sun-like stars) occur. See Hertzsprung-
Russell diagram.
manganese nodule A type of black or brown metallic lump found
on parts of the deep ocean floor. Manganese nodules up to
several feet across form from substances precipitated from
seawater.
84
mantle – marl GLOSSARY
mantle The intermediate and most prominent layer of the Earth, a zone Mantle
of dense, hot rock, 1,800 miles (2,900 km) thick, lying below the
Earth’s crust and above the core and extending roughly halfway
to the center. Some regions of the Earth’s mantle are semi-
molten and flow. The mantle occupies about 84% of the Earth’s
volume and 68% of its mass. It is probably composed of
ultramafic rocks, such as peridotite, enstatite, or eclogite.
mantle plume A plume of molten rock rising from the mantle and
burning a hot spot through the Earth’s crust above.
map The surface of a planet or a moon drawn to scale on a flat
sheet. Small-scale maps show a large area in little detail;
large-scale maps show a small area in great detail. Thematic Mantle
maps show various aspects of the Earth, for instance political Core
maps stress political boundaries, physical maps show
variations in the Earth’s surface, and geological maps stress
rocks. See also topographic map.
map projections Drawings that use mathematics to show the Earth’s
curved surface on a flat sheet of paper. Different projections
accurately show direction, shape, or area, but none shows a
large region without some distortion.
marble A hard, shiny, patterned metamorphic rock formed from
recrystallized limestone or dolomite.
marine sediments The accumulation of mineral and organic material
that has settled from the water onto the ocean floor. Marine
sediments vary greatly in composition and physical
characteristics, depending on factors such as distance from
land, depth of water, and differences in the sources of
sediment. Sediments may be derived from land or may
originate in the sea. Biogenic sediments are those formed from
the skeletal remains of various kinds of marine organisms,
some of which extract silica from the seawater.
marl A gray or blue-gray, crumbly, chalk-like and non-hardened
calcium carbonate deposit that is formed in some freshwater
lakes, partly by the action of certain aquatic plants. The clay
content of marls varies from small to large. Marl will, in time,
harden into marlstone, or marlite.
85
GLOSSARY Mars – meander
Mars The planet fourth in distance from the Sun and little more than
half the diameter of the Earth. Mars is the planet most like the
Earth, but colder, with a thin atmosphere and no liquid water.
marsh Wetland that supports sedges, rushes, or other nonwoody
plants that love moisture. In many estuaries, silt trapped by
salt-tolerant plants builds mudflats into salt marshes.
mass The amount of matter an object contains, indirectly measured
by its inertia: its resistance to a force trying to alter its speed
and direction.
massif An erosion-resistant, very large topographic or structural
feature often of greater rigidity than the surrounding rock. A
mass of ancient rocks forming an upland region. It can be a
partly dissected plateau, with separate peaks.
massive A term applied to a rock or mineral that is either unusually
heavy or that has no particular recognizable features—that is,
lacks any form or structure.
mass movement Soil or rock moving downhill by gravity. Gradual
movement is creep. Flowing movement produces
mudflows and solifluction. Sudden movement causes
landslides and rockfalls. Mass movement is often triggered
by rainwater lubricating loose material on a hillside. See also
solifluction.
matrix Any fine-grained material occurring between grains or clasts in
a sedimentary rock. The interstitial material between larger
crystals, particles, or fragments.
maximum thermometer A thermometer registering the highest
temperature reached during a certain time. Rising mercury
may push a short metal strip up a tube where it stays after the
mercury sinks.
mb See millibar
mean (or arithmetic mean). The total number of a set of items divided
by the number of items.
meander A curve in a river in which the water channel swings from
side to side in a series of loops.
86
mechanical weathering – mesosphere GLOSSARY
87
GLOSSARY Mesozoic era – metamorphic rock
88
metamorphism – midoceanic ridge GLOSSARY
89
GLOSSARY Milky Way – mineral
Meteorite
Meteorite impacts into the punches hole
surface, punching a hole in the
outer crust.
Fused rock
Shock front
Ejected debris
Fallback debris
The falling debris leaves a
layer covering the crater and
surrounding landscape.
Milky Way The spiral galaxy that is home to our solar system. Its 150
billion stars extend some 500,000 light years through space.
millibar (mb) A unit of atmospheric pressure used in the study of
weather and climate. One-thousandth of a bar. A bar is a unit
of pressure equal to 106 dynes per square centimeter, and is
equivalent to 105 newtons per square meter.
mineral A natural inorganic substance with distinct chemical
composition and internal structure. Various kinds of minerals
Milky Way form the ingredients of rocks. Quartz (silicon dioxide) and
90
mineral nomenclature – mist GLOSSARY
91
GLOSSARY mobile belt – monsoon
92
moon – mutualism GLOSSARY
93
GLOSSARY mya – neutron star
94
night – nuclear fusion GLOSSARY
95
GLOSSARY nuclear waste – ocean
ENERGY
96
ocean current – onyx GLOSSARY
97
GLOSSARY oolite – orogenic belt
98
orogeny – outwash deposits GLOSSARY
Cold air
Condensation level
Warm air
Movement of
relatively warm
moist air
99
GLOSSARY outwash plain – Paleocene epoch
100
paleoclimatology – parallax GLOSSARY
101
GLOSSARY parallel drainage pattern – peat
Patterned ground peat A soft, dark mass of partly decayed plants, such as mosses,
sedges, trees, and other plants, that grow in marshes. It occurs
102
pebble – period GLOSSARY
103
GLOSSARY Periodic Table – petrography
104
petroleum – phylogeny GLOSSARY
105
GLOSSARY phylum – plankton
106
plateau – Pliocene epoch GLOSSARY
107
GLOSSARY Pluto – polar
A B B C
Pluto The smallest, coldest planet of the solar system, usually the
farthest from the Sun.
pluton A general term for any large mass of igneous rock, such as
granite formed from magma that cooled deep in the Earth’s crust.
poikiloblast A large crystal that encloses smaller crystals in
metamorphic rock.
polar Of or relating to a planet’s poles.
108
polar front – porphyry GLOSSARY
polar front The shifting boundary between polar and tropical air
masses where mid-latitude and high-latitude low-pressure
systems originate.
polarity (or geomagnetic polarity). The magnetic alignment of certain
particles in igneous rocks, determined by the Earth’s magnetic
field at the time the rocks formed.
polar regions Regions around the North Pole and South Pole.
polar wandering The prehistoric wandering of the Earth’s magnetic
poles, revealed by the different magnetic alignment of particles
in rocks formed at different times.
Poles The ends of the Earth’s axis, forming its northernmost and
southernmost points: the North and South Poles. Their
locations do not correspond exactly with those of the (variable)
north and south magnetic poles produced by the Earth’s
magnetic field.
pollutant Anything that pollutes.
pollution Harmful substances introduced into the environment,
especially poisonous substances introduced into water and air.
population A group of people, animals, or other living organisms
whose numbers are liable to change through death, birth, and
migration.
porosity A measure of the total of spaces between the grains in a rock,
expressed as a percentage of the total volume of the rock.
Permeability is affected by the degree of the interconnection
between these spaces.
porous rock Open-textured rock that lets water pass down through tiny
pores in the rock. Examples include sandstones and some
limestones. See permeable rock; pervious rock.
porphyroblast A large, well-formed crystal produced by
recrystallization and surrounded by a finer-grained matrix of
much smaller crystals in a metamorphic rock.
porphyry Medium to coarse-grained intrusive felsic igneous rock
containing more than 25% of large and well-formed crystals
(phenocrysts) set in a finer-grained matrix.
109
GLOSSARY potassium – predation
110
pressure belts – proton GLOSSARY
pressure dissolution The process that occurs at the contact interfaces Subtropical High
of crystals or grains as a result of pressure, bringing about the 30°
dissolving of material and compaction.
60° Subpolar Low
pressure system A large rotating mass of high or low pressure air. See
also anticyclone; cyclone. 90° Polar High
111
GLOSSARY protostar – Quaternary period
112
radial drainage pattern – radiometric dating GLOSSARY
113
GLOSSARY radio waves – Rayleigh wave
114
recessional moraine – relief GLOSSARY
115
GLOSSARY relief maps – rift valley
relief maps Maps that show hills and valleys by means of contours,
hachures, layered coloring, etc. See contour maps; hachures.
relief rainfall See orographic rainfall.
remote sensing Detecting or measuring an object without touching it,
especially using satellites or aircraft to map the Earth’s surface
features.
renewable resources Crops, fish, timber, sunshine, wind, and other
sources of food or energy that can be used without exhausting
them.
resistant rock Rock that resists weathering and erosion because of
factors such as its hardness and insolubility in water.
respiration A process by which living things take oxygen from their
surroundings, use it in chemical reactions that produce energy,
and release it combined with carbon as carbon dioxide gas.
resurgent stream A stream that reappears after flowing underground
through a cave. Resurgence is a feature of some mountainous
limestone regions. See also karst.
rhyolite A range of very fine-grained extrusive acid igneous rocks,
Ria Coast having the same mineral content as intrusive granites.
Rhyolites are very hard and break like glass. Some show
flow banding or may contain vesicles or amygdales.
Accessory mineral content, often as phenocrysts, include
garnet, topaz, zircon, pyrite, fluorite, and apatite. Glassy
rocks associated with rhyolites include obsidian, pitchstone,
and pumice.
ria A deep, funnel-shaped inlet of the sea occupying a drowned
Ria river valley in a submerged upland coast.
Richter scale A scale measuring the energy released by an earthquake
and invented by American seismologist Charles Richter in
1935. On its scale each number represents ten times the energy
of the number below it.
rift valley A long, steep-sided, flat-bottomed depression in the Earth’s
surface. Rift valleys form where a slab of continental or
oceanic crust slips down between two or more parallel faults.
116
rille – rockets GLOSSARY
117
GLOSSARY rockfall – salt dome
rockfall The free fall of rocks from a cliff face. See also landslide;
rockslide.
rock pedestal A mushroom-shaped rock, its base whittled away by the
sandblasting effect of windborne sand. Rock pedestals are a
feature of some deserts.
rockslide A mass of loose, weathered rock sliding down a line of
weakness in the underyling rock of a slope.
rock step A short, steep step in the floor of a glaciated valley. Ice falls
on glaciers suggest underlying rock steps.
rock-stratigraphic units Sedimentary and volcanic rocks identified by
their characteristics. The units include (from major to minor):
groups, formations, and members.
Rossby waves Large, high-level undulations in the jet streams of the
Earth’s atmosphere. They separate warm, tropical air from
cold, polar air. They are named for the Swedish-American
meteorologist Carl-Gustav Rossby.
rotational slippage A landslide where a mass of rock tilts back as it
slides down a slope, so that its base moves farther forward than
the rest. (See also illustration on page 119.)
ruby Aluminum oxide (corundum) in its rare, deep red-colored form.
rudaceous rock See conglomerate.
runoff (1) Rainwater or meltwater flowing through streams and
underground to reach the sea.
(2) Rainwater or meltwater running over the surface of the
land.
salinization Accumulation in the upper soil levels of salts sucked up by
the evaporation of soil moisture. Salinization is a problem in
some irrigated soils of hot, dry climates. The soil becomes too
salty to grow crops.
saltation The hopping of windblown sand grains over the ground or of
tiny waterborne stones along the bed of a stream.
Saltation
salt dome A massive, vertical underground cylinder of rock salt risen
118
salts – satellites GLOSSARY
Rock
Earth
Concave surface
119
GLOSSARY saturation – Scorpionida
saturation (1) The condition of air containing all the water vapor it can
hold. The amount varies with temperature and pressure.
(2) The condition of rocks containing all the water that they
can hold.
Saturn The second largest planet in the solar system, with a diameter
almost 10 times that of the Earth. More than 20 moons and
7 rings comprising thousands of pieces of ice orbit this
gaseous planet.
Saurischia One of the two orders of dinosaurs. They included bipedal
carnivores (such as Tyrannosaurus) and quadripedal herbivores
such as Brontosaurus, now named Apatosaurus.
scarp See escarpment.
schist A large group of coarse-grained metamorphic rock rich in
Saturn flaky minerals aligned in parallel bands. Schist can be formed
from slate or basalt. As the name implies, schists have zones of
more or less perfect cleavage along which they can easily be
split up into flat slabs. See also schistosity.
schistosity A characteristic of certain types of metamorphic rocks,
notably schists and phyllites, to be able to be split along
parallel planes. This property comes from the distribution and
parallel arrangement of platy mineral crystals such as biotite,
chlorite, muscovite, talc, and graphite. Schistosity is also
conferred by the presence of rodlike crystals such as actinolite,
hornblende, and tremolite.
Schuler pendulum Anything that swings under the influence of gravity
with a period of 84.4 minutes. This is the period of a pendulum
equal in length to the radius of the Earth. Such a pendulum
will remain vertical however the pivot may move.
scintillation counter A detector of radiation in which the receipt of a
quantum of radiation is signaled by a flash of light that is
detected, amplified, and counted.
Scorpionida The order of Arachnida that have a sting at the tip of the
tail. There are about 1,000 species of scorpions but only a
minority are capable of a dangerous sting.
120
scree – sedimentary rock GLOSSARY
121
GLOSSARY sedimentation – seismograph
122
seismology – silicon GLOSSARY
123
GLOSSARY sill – Silurian period
Oxygen atoms
Silicon atom
Oxygen atoms
Chain
(e.g., pyroxene)
124
sinkhole – sodium GLOSSARY
125
GLOSSARY soil – solar energy
126
solar radiation – speciation GLOSSARY
127
GLOSSARY sphere – sponges
equator
the Sun’s
rays
128
spreading ridge – stalagmite GLOSSARY
129
GLOSSARY star – stratigraphic nomenclature
130
stratigraphy – Strigiformes GLOSSARY
131
GLOSSARY strike – subsoil
132
subtropical zones – swash GLOSSARY
133
GLOSSARY S wave – tektites
134
telescopes – Tertiary period GLOSSARY
135
GLOSSARY texture – tillite
136
time zones – transportation GLOSSARY
time zones The world’s 24 time zones, based on the prime meridian.
Clocks are set back one hour with each zone entered to its
west. Clocks are set forward an hour with each zone entered
to its east. See also international date line.
tombolo A spit linking an island to a mainland.
topaz An aluminum silicate mineral valued as a gemstone. It has a
hardness of 8 on Mohs’ scale and occurs as clear, pale yellow,
and (when heated) rose-pink stones.
topographic map A map showing surface features such as hills, rivers,
cities, and roads.
topsoil The upper soil layer, usually rich in humus and plant roots.
tor An exposed, weathered mass of heavily jointed rocks crowning
a hilltop.
Tor
tornado A fierce whirlwind a few dozen yards across, forming a
funnel-shaped cloud. Tornadoes’ wind speeds are the highest
on Earth. In spring, tornadoes cause severe local damage in
Southern and Midwestern states.
toxic Poisonous.
trace elements Chemical elements in tiny amounts essential to life.
They include copper and iodine, found in most soils.
trachytes Fine-grained extrusive igneous rocks with similar mineral
content to syenites. They are the extrusive equivalent of the
intrusive syenites.
trade winds Constant winds blowing from the subtropics toward the
equator. North and south of the equator they are, respectively,
the northeast and southeast trade winds.
transform fault A fault at right angles to a spreading ridge and
separating two offset segments of the lithospheric plate to one
side of the ridge.
transportation (1) In geomorphology, the movement of eroded
material by wind, water, or ice.
(2) In human geography, the movement of goods or people
from place to place.
137
GLOSSARY travertine – tropopause
600 mya trellised drainage pattern A river system where long parallel streams
are joined by short ones flowing at right angles to them.
tremor Trembling of the ground, as produced by a minor earthquake.
trench See oceanic trench.
Triassic period The earliest period (about 248–206 million years ago)
Triassic period of the Mesozoic era. Dinosaurs, mammals, ammonites, modern
248–213 mya corals, various mollusks, and some gymnosperms appeared at
this time.
Present day Triassic Table A geological term for the lowest rock system of the
Triassic period Mesozoic era. The name refers to the three-fold facies of strata
found first in central Germany but since discovered in other
parts of the world. The lowest of these is a non-marine redbed
facies; above this is a marine limestone, sandstone, and shale
facies; and above this is another non-marine continental facies
similar to the lower division.
tributary (1) A stream flowing into a larger stream.
(2) A valley glacier joining a larger glacier.
trilobites Fossil animals of the most primitive arthropod class occurring
from the early Cambrian period through the Permian period.
Trilobites were segmented animals with head, thorax, and hind
regions and two longitudinal furrows partially dividing the
body into three parallel lobes.
triple junction The meeting point of three lithospheric plates.
tropic of Cancer The parallel (line of latitude) 23° north of the equator.
tropic of Capricorn The parallel (line of latitude) 23° south of the
equator.
tropics Regions between the tropics of Cancer and Capricorn.
tropism The directional growth of a plant or part of a plant under the
influence of an external stimulus such as light, physical
contact, or gravity. Tropisms may be positive or negative.
tropopause The boundary between the troposphere and the
GLOSSARY travertine – tropopause
138
troposphere – ultramafic GLOSSARY
139
GLOSSARY ultraviolet radiation – unconformity
516 830
Submarine
earthquake 93 150
30 48
mph kmph
Decreasing
speeds
140
uniformitarianism – vein GLOSSARY
141
GLOSSARY Venus – warm front
Venus The second planet from the Sun, almost as large and heavy as
the Earth but with a scorching, suffocating atmosphere.
vernal Relating to or happening in spring.
Vertebrata A subphylum of the phylum Chordata of the animal
kingdom, containing all animals possessing a backbone
(vertebral column). The vertebrates include the fish, amphibia,
reptiles, birds, and mammals.
vesicle A small spherical or ellipsoid cavity in an igneous rock caused
originally by a gas bubble.
viscosity The resistance offered by any material to its ability to flow.
vitreous Of, resembling, or relating to, glass.
volatiles Substances that pass readily into the gaseous state at ordinary
temperatures. Substances with a high vapor pressure.
volcanic glass Natural glass formed by rapidly cooling lava.
Volcanic glass is opaque, variously colored red, brown,
black, gray, or green, and may be banded. It fractures with
smooth shell-shaped concave and convex surfaces
(conchoidal fracture). Most natural glasses are chemically
equivalent to rhyolite.
volcano A commonly steep-sided, or cone-shaped mountain or hill,
formed by the accumulation of hardened magma pierced by a
hole or fissure from which lava and/or hot ash and gases erupt
from deep underground. Volcanoes are termed active, dormant,
or extinct, depending on how often they erupt. Big eruptions
produce greater elevation of the volcano or extensive sheets of
extrusive igneous rock. Volcanoes and their products are much
more prominent on the Earth’s Moon, on Mars, and on
Volcano Jupiter’s moons than on Earth.
vug or vugh A cavity or irregular opening in a rock that may contain a
lining of crystalline minerals.
wadi A normally dry desert watercourse.
warm front The moving boundary between a warm air mass advancing
over a cold one, bringing low cloud and rain.
142
water cycle – water table GLOSSARY
water cycle The circulation of water from sea and land to air and back.
Water evaporates from sea and land, condenses as clouds and
falls as rain, hail, sleet, or snow.
water pollution Contamination of rivers, lakes, and seas by fertilizers,
pesticides, sewage, and oil or toxic waste.
watershed (or drainage basin). Land drained by a river and its tributaries.
water table The upper surface of rock saturated by groundwater. A
water table’s level roughly shadows that of the ground above it.
Wet and dry weather make the water table rise and fall.
Water cycle
1 Evapotranspiration
2 Evaporation
3 Transportation
3 4
4 Condensation
5 Precipitation
6 Surface runoff
7 Infiltration
8 Groundwater flow 3
A Vegetation 1
B Soil 2
C Streams
D Lakes 2
E Oceans 2 5
F Water table 2
A B C D E F
143
GLOSSARY water vapor – wetlands
water vapor Water in air, gaseous in form but below the temperature
at which it boils to form steam.
wave A disturbance moving through the surface layers of water or
land.
wave-cut platform A rock platform extending out to sea just below
sea level. It shows where a cliff coast has been cut back and
beveled by waves.
wave power The energy in sea waves exploited to generate
electricity.
waxes Substances containing mixtures of esters of higher fatty acids
and long-chain monohydric alcohols.
weather The meteorological state of the atmosphere at a particular
geographic locality, especially with regard to atmospheric
Wave pressure, temperature, wind speed, cloudiness, humidity, and
rainfall. When similar conditions obtain over a wide area, the
whole is called a weather system.
weathering The decay and breakup of rocks on the Earth’s surface by
natural chemical and mechanical processes.
weather map or weather chart (or synoptic chart). A chart showing
the weather at a particular time and place. Weather charts use
special symbols to indicate such things as temperatures,
pressures, winds, precipitation, and weather fronts. See also
isobar; isohyet; isotherm.
weight The force attracting an object to the Earth or other heavenly
body.
westerlies The prevailing winds of the mid-latitudes.
Muslin wet and dry bulb thermometer (psychrometer) An instrument
Dry
bulb showing the amount of water vapor in air. It features two
thermometers: one with a dry bulb and one cooled by a
Wet bulb
moistened bulb. The temperature difference between the two
Water reveals relative humidity. See also hygrometer; humidity.
Wet and dry bulb wetlands Bogs, marshes, swamps, floodplains, and estuaries. Many
thermometer have high and varied populations of plants and animals.
144
white dwarf – yellow dwarf GLOSSARY
white dwarf A faint old star that is far smaller than our Sun, but hotter.
Wilson cycle The hypothesis that ocean basins pass through a series of
stages from an initial embryonic stage involving uplift and
crust extension through seafloor spreading, basin formation
with continental shelves, then the development of instability,
sinking to form ocean trenches, shrinkage and continental
closure, leading to final destruction. The plate tectonics
involved in several of these stages have been identified in
various places. This scheme was put forward by Professor John
Tuzo Wilson of Toronto University.
wind A horizontal flow of air over the Earth’s surface. Winds are
described by the directions they come from: for instance, north
winds blow from the north. Wind systems help to spread the
Sun’s heat around the world. See also Beaufort scale.
wind measurement The determination of the size, speed, and direction
of motion of an air sample.
wind power The kinetic energy in wind exploited by aerogenerators to
produce electricity and perform useful work. In the United
States, at least 20% of energy is consumed in heating
buildings, and in colder climates, heating demand is commonly
associated with high wind energy. So wind-generated
electricity, combined in some cases with solar heat collectors,
can offer a means of reducing fuel oil consumption.
wind vane An instrument with an arrow-shaped arm that rotates to
show wind direction. Yardang
145
GLOSSARY zenith – zooplankton
zenith The point directly overhead in the sky. Compare nadir, the
diametrically opposite point.
zenithal projections See azimuthal projections.
zeolites A large group of minerals of hydrated alumina silicates of the
elements sodium, calcium, potassium, and barium. They occur
in geodes, hot water cavities (hydrothermal veins), altered
igneous rocks, and some sediments.
zeugen Tabular rock formations in deserts. Zeugen develop in
horizontal strata where windblown sand widens joints in
resistant rock and scours away the softer rock underneath.
zircon A mineral containing the elements zirconium, silicon, and
oxygen with various impurities. The pale stones are popular as
semiprecious gemstones resembling diamonds.
zodiac A belt of stars that seems to surround the Earth. Its twelve
divisions feature two of the apparent star groups called
constellations.
zoogeography The scientific study of the geographical distribution of
animals.
zooplankton Water creatures that drift or swim only weakly in surface
waters, especially tiny creatures that teem in the oceans. See
also phytoplankton; plankton.
Zeugen
Wind direction
Hard rock
Zeugen
Soft rock
146
SECTION
TWO
BIOGRAPHIES
147
BIOGRAPHIES Abbe – Aldrovandi
148
Alvarez – Aristotle BIOGRAPHIES
149
BIOGRAPHIES Baade – Beaufort
150
Beaumont – Bentham BIOGRAPHIES
151
BIOGRAPHIES Bertrand – Bishop
152
Bjerknes – Bradley BIOGRAPHIES
153
BIOGRAPHIES Brahe – Burbank
Alexandre Brongniart Brown, Robert (1773–1858) Scottish botanist renowned for his
investigation into the impregnation of plants. He was the first
to note that, in general, living cells contain a central dark-
staining mass, and to name it the nucleus. In 1827, he first
observed the “Brownian movement” of fine particles in liquid
caused by molecular movements.
Brunfels, Otto (ca. 1488–1534) German botanist who, with two others,
Hieronymus Bock and Leonhard Fuchs, is considered a
pioneer of modern botany. Brunfels also produced accurate and
detailed botanical illustrations of real scientific value.
Buffon, Georges-Louis Leclerc, Comte de (1707–88) French
naturalist who wrote a 44-volume work on natural history that,
he hoped, would contain all that was known of the subject at
the time. Buffon partly accepted the idea of evolution and
realized that all species were, in some way, related.
Bunsen, Robert Wilhelm (1811–99) German experimental chemist
Georges-Louis Buffon and inventor. He developed the gas burner that bears his name
and the ice calorimeter. Working with the German physicist
Gustav Kirchhoff, he developed the important analytical
technique of chemical spectroscopy. Bunsen also discovered
the elements cesium and rubidium.
Burbank, Luther (1849–1926) American horticulturist who pioneered
the process of improving food plants through grafting,
hybridization and other means. He developed the Burbank
potato and new varieties of plums and berries. He also
developed new flowers, including the Burbank rose and the
Shasta daisy.
154
Calvin – Celsius BIOGRAPHIES
155
BIOGRAPHIES Cesalpino – Chapman
156
Charpentier – Copernicus BIOGRAPHIES
157
BIOGRAPHIES Coriolis – Cronstedt
timing may have been fortunate, as such beliefs were then held
to be heretical and could lead to burning at the stake.
Coriolis, Gaspard-Gustave de (1792–1843) French physicist who
applied his studies of a spinning surface to such phenomena as
the way that weather and ocean current patterns differ in the
Northern and Southern Hemispheres. He is remembered for
the Coriolis effect, which describes the force acting on mobile
objects on the Earth’s surface. He was first to coin the term
kinetic energy.
Correns, Karl Erich (1864–1933) German botanist who, independently
of Gregor Mendel, described the laws of inheritance of
characteristics. He was also able to show that certain factors
are inherited from sources other than from material in the
nucleus of the cell. This cytoplasmic inheritance was later
shown to be by mitochondrial DNA.
Coster, Dirk (1889–1950) Dutch physicist who, with Georg von
Hevesy, discovered the element hafnium.
Cousteau, Jacques-Yves (1910–97) French oceanographer and
inventor who produced a number of underwater devices,
including the aqualung and the bathyscaphe. He also pioneered
underwater photography. As author and filmmaker, he
increased public interest in, and awareness of, the underwater
world. He also took an active part in the environmental
protection movement.
Croll, James (1821–90) Scottish geologist who produced the theory
that ice ages are caused by eccentricities in the orbit of the
Earth, which cause periodic global temperature drops as the
planet swings farther from the heat of the Sun. He investigated
these eccentricities and found that they had varied considerably
in degree. He postulated that if a major eccentricity coincided
with the Earth being farthest from the Sun, an ice age might
result.
Cronstedt, Axel Frederik (1722–65) Swedish mineralogist who in
1751 was the first to isolate nickel. He then demonstrated its
magnetic properties. Cronstedt wrote an influential work,
Essay towards a System of Mineralogy (1758), in which he
suggested that minerals should be classified by their
chemical composition.
BIOGRAPHIES Coriolis – Cronstedt
158
Crookes – Darwin BIOGRAPHIES
159
BIOGRAPHIES Darwin – Democritus
160
Descartes – Dubois BIOGRAPHIES
161
BIOGRAPHIES Du Fay – Ekman
162
Elhuyar – Eratosthenes BIOGRAPHIES
163
BIOGRAPHIES Eskola – Fitzroy
164
Flamsteed – Galilei BIOGRAPHIES
165
BIOGRAPHIES Galle – Geikie
166
Gellibrand – Goethe BIOGRAPHIES
167
BIOGRAPHIES Goode – Gutenberg
168
Hadley – Harrison BIOGRAPHIES
169
BIOGRAPHIES Hatchett – Herschel
170
Herschel – Holmes BIOGRAPHIES
171
BIOGRAPHIES Hooker – Hubble
172
Huggins – Jeffreys BIOGRAPHIES
173
BIOGRAPHIES Johansen – Kepler
174
Kremer – Lapworth BIOGRAPHIES
175
BIOGRAPHIES Lartet – Lemaître
176
Leucippus – Lorenz BIOGRAPHIES
177
BIOGRAPHIES Love – Lyell
178
Maillet – Mayr BIOGRAPHIES
have been produced by forces that were still at work. The book
greatly influenced Charles Darwin. Lyell held that fossils are
the best guides to identifying geological strata, and was one of
the first to suggest that the Earth was much older than the
6,000 years suggested by the Bible.
Maillet, Benoit de (1656–1738) French naturalist who, while
accepting that the biblical account of the Creation was true,
insisted, nevertheless, that new animal and plant forms had
come into existence during the history of the Earth.
Mantell, Gideon Algernon (1790–1852) English geologist, who, with
his wife, Mary, was the first to recognize that dinosaur bones
are the remains of extinct giant reptiles.
Marbut, Curtis Fletcher (1863–1935) American soil specialist
(pedologist) who applied Russian ideas of soil formation to the
Gideon Mantell
United States. He was the first to produce a soil classification
system in America.
Marsh, Othniel Charles (1831–99) American paleontologist who
discovered (mainly in the Rocky Mountains) over 1,000
species of extinct American vertebrates. Marsh searched for
fossils, especially of dinosaurs, in the western United States,
entering into fierce, and not always scrupulous, competition
with other fossil hunters, especially Edward D. Cope.
Marsili, Luigi Ferdinando (1658–1730) Italian naturalist who made
measurements of the temperatures and pressures at varying
depths in the oceans.
Maury, Matthew Fontaine (1806–73) American oceanographer whose
detailed studies and analysis of ocean currents and winds,
mainly collected from merchant seamen, enabled him to
publish charts for navigators that substantially shortened ocean
voyages for sailing ships. He made similar studies of ocean
depths across the Atlantic.
Mayr, Ernst Walter (1904–2005) German-born American zoologist
whose early work was on the ornithology of the Pacific, but
later was best known for neo-Darwinian views on evolution, as
developed in Animal Species and Evolution (1963) and
Evolution and the Diversity of Life (1976). Mayr also worked Ernst Mayr
179
BIOGRAPHIES Mendeleyev – Mohl
Hugo von Mohl Mohl, Hugo von (1805–72) German botanist and pioneer of the
microscopic study of plant structure and of research into plant
BIOGRAPHIES Mendeleyev – Mohl
180
Mohorovic̆ić – Newton BIOGRAPHIES
181
BIOGRAPHIES Noddack – Penck
182
Penck – Playfair BIOGRAPHIES
183
BIOGRAPHIES Pliny the Younger – Roemer
184
Russell – Seaborg BIOGRAPHIES
Jupiter and the Earth were moving away from each other and
less when they were approaching each other. He concluded
that light must be taking longer to reach Earth from the greater
distance and that it must therefore move with a finite speed. He
was able to make an assessment of the speed.
Russell, Henry Norris (1877–1957) American astronomer and
professor of astronomy at Princeton University who suggested
a now superseded theory of stellar evolution in which stars
begin as dim dull objects, shrink and heat up, and then cool
again to become red stars once more.
Rutherford, Daniel (1749–1819) Scottish chemist who was one of the
discoverers of nitrogen gas.
Sagan, Carl Edward (1934–96) American astronomer who, through
books and television, did much to popularize this aspect of
science. He worked on the physics and chemistry of planetary
atmospheres and surfaces, and on the origin of life on Earth.
Saussure, Horace-Bénédict de (1740–99) Swiss geologist and Carl Sagan
physicist who explained the shape of the Alps by horizontal
opposing movements of strata causing levels to be pushed up
(alpine folding), and by subsequent erosion. He wrote
extensively on mineralogy, botany, and meteorology.
Schiaparelli, Giovanni Virginio (1835–1910) Italian astronomer and
head of the Brera observatory in Milan who studied meteors
and twin stars and, in 1877, described the so-called canals of
Mars, and in 1861, the asteroid Hesperia.
Schleiden, Matthias Jakob (1804–81) German botanist who did much
to establish cell theory. He showed that cells are the units of
structure in plants and animals, and that organisms are
aggregates of cells arranged according to definite laws.
Schlotheim, Ernst von (1764–1832) German paleontologist and
pioneer who used fossils to find the relative ages of rock
layers.
Seaborg, Glenn Theodore (1912–99) American chemist and atomic
scientist who discovered many previously unknown isotopes of
common elements. He assisted in the production of a number
of non-natural, above-uranium (transuranic) elements,
185
BIOGRAPHIES Sedgwick – Steno
186
Struve – Thunberg BIOGRAPHIES
187
BIOGRAPHIES Tinbergen – Urbain
188
Van Allen – Went BIOGRAPHIES
Van Allen, James Alfred (b. 1914) American physicist who developed
the radio proximity fuse; employed rockets to study the
physics of the upper atmosphere; contributed to the success of
the first American artificial satellite (Explorer 1); and
discovered two belts of energetically charged particles circling
the Earth (Van Allen radiation belts), which are retained by the
Earth’s magnetic field.
Vries, Hugo Marie de (1848–1935) Dutch botanist and geneticist who
from 1890 devoted himself to the study of heredity and
variation in plants, significantly developing Mendelian
genetics and evolutionary theory. Die Mutationstheorie (The
mutation theory), in which he showed that mutations occur in
organisms, was published in 1901–03.
Wallace, Alfred Russel (1823–1913) Welsh naturalist whose memoir,
Hugo de Vries
sent to Charles Darwin in 1858 from the Moluccas in the East
Indies, was read at a meeting of the Linnaean Society at which
Charles Darwin’s paper was also read. Wallace’s paper virtually
duplicated Darwin’s theory of evolution by means of natural
selection, and hastened Darwin’s publication of On the Origin
of Species. This revolutionary work was extended by Wallace’s
Contributions to the Theory of Natural Selection (1870).
Wallace was generous and apparently free from jealousy. He
called his own later book on evolution Darwinism (1889). He
recorded the division between zoological types in the east and
west islands of Malaysia, known as the Wallace line.
Wegener, Alfred Lothar (1880–1930) German geologist and
meteorologist who, having noted that the Atlantic east coast
could be fitted roughly into the Atlantic west coast, first
suggested the idea of continental drift in 1912. His theory was
detailed in Origins of Continents and Oceans (1915). He was
laughed at, but by the 1960s measurements had proved that
the continents had moved. His ideas became accepted and
have helped to pave the way for the theory of plate tectonics,
which has been established as one of the major tenets of
modern geophysics.
Went, Friedrich August Ferdinand Christian (1863–1935) Dutch
botanist and specialist in tropical agriculture, whose Utrecht
School was renowned for its research into plant physiology.
189
BIOGRAPHIES Werner – Yonge
190
SECTION
THREE
CHRONOLOGY
191
CHRONOLOGY ca. 1760 BCE–ca. 250 BCE
192
240 BCE–CA. 1190 CE CHRONOLOGY
193
CHRONOLOGY 1233–1583
CHRONOLOGY 1233–1583
194
1590–1684 CHRONOLOGY
1590 ● Aristotle’s
theories of motion are refuted by Italian scientist
Galileo Galilei.
1597 ● Copernican system of the universe is defended by Italian
scientist Galileo Galilei in a letter to German scientist
Johannes Kepler.
ca. 1600 ● Theory that the Earth is a huge magnet is put forward by
English physician William Gilbert, who also studies static
electricity.
1608 ● Refractingtelescope invented by Dutch instrument maker
Hans Lippershey.
1610 ● Discovery of rings of Saturn, phases of Venus, moons of
Jupiter, and irregular surface of the Moon by Italian scientist
Galileo Galilei, using a telescope.
1620 ● English philosopher Francis Bacon observes the near fit of
the west coast of Africa and the east coast of South America.
1635 ● Evidence that the Earth’s magnetic poles shift position over
time presented by English astronomer Henry Gellibrand.
1643 ● Barometer (instrument for measuring air pressure) invented
by Italian physicist Evangelista Torricelli.
1647 ● French scientist Blaise Pascal demonstrates that air pressure
decreases with altitude and shows that air has a finite height.
1643
1665 ● English physicist Sir Isaac Newton conceives the idea of Torricelli invents barometer.
universal gravitation and an explanation for lunar motions.
1668 ● Reflecting
telescope invented by English physicist Sir Isaac
Newton who uses it to study celestial phenomena.
1670s ● French astronomer Jean Richer concludes that the diameter
of the Earth is greater around the equator than from Pole to
Pole and that the Earth is not a perfect sphere.
1674 ● Study of the hydrologic cycle probably started by French
lawyer Pierre Perrault, who solves the mystery of the
origins of springs.
1684 ● Firstfairly accurate figure for the circumference and
diameter of the Earth published posthumously in a book by 1668
French astronomer Jean Picard. Sir Isaac Newton invents
reflecting telescope.
1590–1684 CHRONOLOGY
195
CHRONOLOGY 1686–1755
CHRONOLOGY 1686–1755
196
1757–1822 CHRONOLOGY
197
CHRONOLOGY ca. 1830–ca. 1850
198
1851–1885 CHRONOLOGY
199
CHRONOLOGY 1889–1920s
CHRONOLOGY 1889–1920s
200
1926–1954 CHRONOLOGY
201
CHRONOLOGY 1957–1978
CHRONOLOGY 1957–1978
202
1980–1998 CHRONOLOGY
1980–1998 CHRONOLOGY
203
CHRONOLOGY 1999–2005
CHRONOLOGY 1999–2005
204
SECTION
FOUR
KEY ADVANCES
205
KEY ADVANCES air composition – Buys Ballot law
206
Cambrian period – Devonian period KEY ADVANCES
207
KEY ADVANCES dinosaur – evolution
dinosaur (1) Mary Mantell (U.K.) discovers the first fossil dinosaur.
[1822]
(2) Richard Owen (U.K.) coins the name dinosaur. [1842]
earthquake (1) Robert Hooke (England) theorizes that the cooling and
contracting of the Earth caused earthquakes. [1670]
(2) John Michell (U.K.) suggests that earthquakes set up wave
motions in the Earth. [1760]
(3) Clarence Dutton (U.S.) develops a way of calculating the
velocity of seismic waves. [1905]
Earth, rotation of Léon Foucault (France) proves the Earth’s rotation.
[1851]
Earth, size and shape of (1) Pythagoras (Greece) argues that the Earth
is a sphere. [ca. 530 BCE]
(2) Jean Richer (France) concludes that the Earth is not a
perfect sphere. [ca. 1670]
(3) In a book published posthumously, Jean Picard (France)
presents fairly accurate figures of the circumference and
diameter of the Earth. [1684]
(4) Sir Isaac Newton (England) theorizes that Earth is an
oblate spheroid. [1687]
ecology (1) Aristotle (Greece) introduces ecological concepts into
scientific literature. [ca. 350 BCE]
(2) Ernst Haeckel (Germany) introduces the term ecology to
refer to the study of living organism and their relation to one
another and their environment. [1866]
ecosystem Arthur George Tansley (U.K.) introduces the concept of
ecosystem. [1935]
Eocene period Charles Lyell (U.K.) identifies the Eocene period.
[1833]
erosion Henri Gautier (France) explains the process of river erosion.
[1721]
evolution (1) Charles Bonnet (Switzerland) first uses the term
evolution. [ca. 1755]
(2) Bonnet argues for the catastrophic theory of evolution. [1769]
(3) Jean-Baptiste Lamarck (France) becomes the first major
biologist to advance the concept of evolution. [1809]
(4) Charles Darwin (U.K.) sails on HMS Beagle to collect
208
food chain – gyroscope KEY ADVANCES
209
KEY ADVANCES Halley’s comet – longitude
210
magnetic poles – neptunism KEY ADVANCES
211
KEY ADVANCES neutron star – radio telescope
212
Rayleigh waves – telescope KEY ADVANCES
213
KEY ADVANCES temperature scale – X-ray stars
214
SECTION
FIVE
TYLER PRIZE
WINNERS
215
TYLER WINNERS date
1974–1985
216
date
1986–1992 TYLER WINNERS
date
1986–1992 TYLER WINNERS
217
TYLER WINNERS date
1993–1998
218
date
1999–2002 TYLER WINNERS
date
1999–2002 TYLER WINNERS
219
TYLER WINNERS date
2003–2005
220
SECTION
SIX
CHARTS
& TABLES
221
CHARTS & TABLES Geological time
Oligocene
Cretaceous 34–23.8
144–65
Eocene
55–34
Jurassic
206–144 Paleocene
PALEOZOIC 65–55
543–248 Triassic
248–206
EONS
Note: Dates
Phanerozoic eon Permian are in millions
543 million years 290–248 of years before
ago–today the present.
Proterozoic eon
2.5 billion–543
million years ago Carboniferous
354–290
Devonian
417–354
Archean eon
4–2.5 billion Silurian
years ago 443–417
Ordovician
490–443
Hadean eon
4.5–4 billion
years ago
Cambrian
543–490
222
Time periods CHARTS & TABLES
Time periods
PRECAMBRIAN EONS PERIODS IN PALEOZOIC ERA PERIODS IN MESOZOIC ERA
Hadean eon Cambrian period Triassic period
Few traces remain of rocks formed in Most continents, including a southern Pangaea showed signs of breaking up.
the Hadean eon, when Earth’s early supercontinent, lay near the equator. Lands were mild or warm and largely
crust was evidently molten. Shallow seas teemed with complex dry. The dinosaurs, pterosaurs, and
early life forms, such as brachiopods, crocodilians all evolved from other
Archean eon gastropods, graptolites, and trilobites. reptiles in the group known as
During this eon there was some archosaurs (“ruling reptiles”).
continental rock, an ocean, and an Ordovician period
atmosphere, produced by resorting of A shrinking pre-Atlantic ocean Jurassic period
Earth’s less dense ingredients. A light brought proto-North America, The Atlantic was opening up. The
scum of igneous and metamorphic Greenland, and Europe close. Ice Tethys Sea divided supercontinents
rocks created microcontinents—the covered some southern lands. Coral, Laurasia and Gondwana, which were
cores of modern continents. Fossil dolomite, and limestone covered the already splitting up into the continents
cyanobacteria show that life was shallow seafloor, and the first fish-like we know today, inhabited by birds
established in the sea at least 3.5 vertebrates appeared. and mammals.
billion years ago
Silurian period Cretaceous period
Proterozoic eon Colliding northern proto-continents Thick chalk deposits formed below
As Earth’s crust cooled, the first large thrust up a mountain range from shallow seas, covering parts of North
continents appeared, and were drifting Scandinavia, through Scotland, to the America and Europe. Continental drift
under the effect of plate tectonics— Appalachians. Eroded debris formed was under way and climates cooled.
the ocean floor was rifting and being thick sea sediments. First land plants Dinosaurs and pterosaurs died out.
subducted under the continents. (spore-bearing) established.
Dissolved salts gave the sea its PERIODS IN CENOZOIC ERA
saltiness. Cyanobacteria released Devonian period
oxygen that began accumulating in the Sandstone formed from the eroding Paleogene (Early Tertiary) and
arid Old Red Continent (eastern North Neogene (Late Tertiary) periods
sea and atmosphere. By 600 million India merged with Asia, and colliding
years ago, complex multicelled America and Greenland fused with
western Europe). Fish abounded, the plates thrust up the Rockies, Alps,
organisms were evolving in shallow, and Himalayas. Birds and mammals
offshore seas. first amphibians appeared with spiders
evolved and multiplied. Flowering
and ammonites, and forests formed. plants now dominated other kinds.
PHANEROZOIC EON There was great diversity of plant and
Continental drift saw continents Carboniferous period
Limestone formed below a shallow animal life, culminating in the earliest
coalesce and break up. Uplift and hominids.
erosion raised and wore down chains North American sea, followed by
of mountains. Seas and oceans spread warm, swampy coal forests, inhabited Quaternary period
and shrank. Ice sheets waxed and by early reptiles and winged insects. As temperatures dropped, ice sheets
waned. Early in the eon all major Permian period covered Antarctica and large parts of
groups of living things became All the continents lay forced together as the Northern Hemisphere, and the
established. In time fishes gave rise to Pangaea. In arid inland areas, salt lakes ocean level fell. In warm phases, ice
amphibians, reptiles, birds, and produced evaporites and desert retreated and the ocean level rose. The
mammals. From the first lowly land sandstones were formed. The drying up present warm interval began about
plants came trees and later flowers. of shallow seas contributed to mass 10,000 years ago. Development of
extinctions, but reptiles, beetles and primates and early hominids toward
coniferous trees survived. modern human beings occurred.
223
CHARTS & TABLES Origin and structure of the Earth – Evolving continents
a c
b d
Evolving continents
1 200 million years ago, the
1 2 supercontinent Pangaea (“All
c a c Earth”) was breaking up and its
a b components began to drift.
b 2 140 million years ago,
e d f break-up had produced a
e d
f northern landmass, Laurasia,
h h
g g and a southern landmass,
Gondwana, separated by the
b
Tethys Sea.
3 65 million years ago, the
3 4 widening Atlantic Ocean had
a b c a c separated the Americas from
f Africa, and continents were
d
d e gaining their present shapes and
e f
h positions. India had broken free
h from Africa but not yet docked
g g with Asia.
4 The current shapes and
a North America e South America positions of the seven
b Europe f Indian Subcontinent continents. The Atlantic Ocean
c Asia g Antarctica
d Africa h Australia
is still widening.
CHARTS & TABLES Origin and structure of the Earth – Evolving continents
224
Rock cycle CHARTS & TABLES
Rock cycle
The rock cycle is a continuous round of 3 The constant pressure pushes the
erosion, deposition, and heat. sedimentary rock further and further down,
1 Igneous (volcanic) rocks are formed where it begins to be affected by heat from
when magma (liquid rock) is forced to the Earth’s core. This heat causes the
the surface under pressure and erupts structure of the rock to change, or
through a volcano. As the magma reaches metamorphose, and it now becomes known
the surface, it solidifies and becomes as metamorphic rock. If it remains under
1 igneous rock. high pressure and constant heat, the rock
2 The rock is now exposed to the elements, will eventually become magma, which may
and over a long period of time begins to be rise to the surface under pressure and erupt
2 eroded and weathered. The rock particles again as a volcano.
are carried by rivers, wind, and rain to the
3
oceans and seas. The particles build up into
layers that over many thousands of years
are buried deeper and deeper. The weight
of layers presses the lowest layers into a
solid; this is called sedimentary rock.
Igneous rocks are formed when magma Sedimentary rocks are mainly made from Metamorphic rocks are formed from
from the inside of the Earth rises to the the remains, or sediments, of older rocks other rocks that have been heated or placed
surface and cools. The size of the crystals that have been worn away. These are under pressure. These factors change the
in the rock shows the speed at which the washed into rivers and out to sea. rock. Metamorphic rocks such as marble or
magma cooled. Granite and basalt are Fragments settle near the shore, forming slate tend to have crystals in bands, or
igneous rocks. sandstone (1). Further offshore, rock layers.
1 Pumice is made by gases bubbling deposits collect to form shale (2), and in
through lava. warm seas, deposits collect to form
2 Basalt hardens quickly above the surface. limestone (3). On the seabed the sediments
The rock crystals are small because they are squeezed together, eventually
have not had much time to grow. becoming solid rock.
3 Granite hardens slowly below the
surface;
the crystals
are large.
1
2
1
1 Magma 2 Heated 3 Erosion
heats limestone is reveals marble
2 limestone compressed
3
3
225
CHARTS & TABLES Earth plate tectonics
8 5 10
Lithospheric plates
1 African plate 3
4 9 Lithospheric
2 Antarctic plate 1
3 Arabian plate 7 plates
11 6
4 Caribbean plate
5 Eurasian plate
6 Indo-Australian plate 2
7 Nazca plate
8 North American plate
9 Pacific plate
10 Philippines plate
11 South American plate Subduction
zones
Spreading
zones
226
Folds and faults – Mercalli and Richter scales CHARTS & TABLES
Folds and faults – Mercalli and Richter scales CHARTS & TABLES
227
CHARTS & TABLES World distribution of mountains
North 3
11 America
Asia
20 Europe
23
22
Africa
South
America
4
Australia
8
13 15 17 16
5
Antarctica
228
World distribution of volcanoes CHARTS & TABLES
1 7 4 3 10 2 5 9 6 8
Africa
South
America
Australia
229
CHARTS & TABLES World climates
World climates A B C D E F
1
1 Polar climate zone
2 Temperate climate zone 2
3 Tropical climate zone
Key to graphs
2
Rainfall (mm)
Temperature oC 1
0 0 20
100 100 100
-10 -10 10
0 -20 0 -20 0 0
J F M A M J J A S O N D J F M A M J J A S O N D J F M A M J J A S O N D
A Cold temperate (continental) B Polar C Cool temperate (marine)
Peace River (Canada) Total 376 mm Thule (Greenland) Total 93 mm London (UK) Total 593 mm
Rainfall (mm) Temperature oC
600 90
Rainfall (mm) 80
Rainfall (mm) 500
300 o 300 o 70
Temperature C Temperature C
40 40 400 60
50
200 30 200 30 300
40
20 20 200 30
100 100
20
10 10 100
10
0 0 0 0 0 0
J F M A M J J A S O N D J F M A M J J A S O N D J F M A M J J A S O N D
D Warm temperate E Tropical (desert) F Tropical (monsoon)
Athens (Greece) Total 402 mm Cairo (Egypt) Total 25 mm Yangon (Myanmar) Total 2,620 mm
230
World wind systems CHARTS & TABLES
● high pressure
● low pressure
231
CHARTS & TABLES World ocean currents
Circulation (below) 7
Between the equator and the 6
temperate regions in the
Northern Hemisphere (1), the
circulation of ocean currents is
clockwise, while in the
Southern Hemisphere (2) it is Major cold currents (above) Major warm currents (below)
counterclockwise. 1 California 5 Benguela 1 North Atlantic (Gulf Stream)
In equatorial regions, currents 2 Humboldt 6 Falkland 2 South Atlantic
move in opposite directions, 3 Labrador 7 West Australian 3 South Indian Ocean
those in the north moving left to 4 Canaries 8 Okhotsk 4 South Pacific
right, those in the south from 5 North Pacific
right to left (3). Currents 6 Monsoons
moving north and south from
equatorial regions carry warm
water and those moving south
and north from polar regions
carry cold water. 5 1
6 6
1
Major warm 4
currents
3
2
4 3
232
Weather map symbols CHARTS & TABLES
Cloud types
Cloud cover
Precipitation
233
CHARTS & TABLES Cloud types
1 2
a a
b b
d c
Lows (depressions) bring wind and 1 At a warm front, warm, moist air a Warm air
rain to the temperate midlatitudes. rides up over colder air, producing b Cold air
Whirling “pinwheels” of air hundreds sheetlike stratus cloud shedding c Heavy showers
of miles across, they form where cold steady drizzle or snow. d Prolonged drizzle
polar air clashes with warm, moist, 2 At a cold front following a warm
subtropical air along a boundary, front, cold air undercuts warmer air
called the polar front. Lows bring from behind. This may produce dark
warm and cold fronts. nimbostratus clouds shedding heavy
showers of rain or snow.
234
Winds CHARTS & TABLES
Winds
The Beaufort scale
This is an internationally recognized scale for describing wind It originated in 1805 when British admiral Sir Francis Beaufort
speeds that are 33 feet (10 m) above ground level. The table devised a scale of numbers to describe the effects on sailing
gives standard descriptions and wind speeds corresponding to ships of winds of different speeds.
each number in the Beaufort scale.
mph 1 3 7 12 18 24 31 38 46 54 63 73
Number 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
235
CHARTS & TABLES Topographic map symbols – Latitude and longitude
236
Map projections CHARTS & TABLES
Map projections
These are standard devices for
showing the Earth’s global
surface on a flat sheet of paper.
Each type of projection distorts
the Earth in some way.
Cylindrical projection
This is made as if wrapping a
sheet of paper around a globe’s
equator to produce a cylinder or
tube. On such projections, lines
of longitude meet lines of
latitude at right angles and so do
not meet at the poles. The view
stretches polar areas but can
show a true compass course.
Conic projection
This is made as if a cone of
paper is wrapped around a globe
so as to touch it along one line of
latitude. A conic projection
shows lines of latitude as curved
and lines of longitude as meeting
at a pole. Conic projections show
areas, directions, and distances
fairly accurately.
Mathematical projection
Mathematical projections are
devised for special purposes.
This homolosine equal-area
projection is useful for showing
the global distributions of
different phenomena. Achieving
accurate representation of area
in this type of projection may
involve interruption, as in the
example shown here.
237
CHARTS & TABLES Population structure
Population structure
The population pyramid for
Equatorial Guinea (1), a
developing country, has a
wide base (many births), 1. Equatorial Guinea 2005 2. France 2005
reducing steadily to a MALES FEMALES MALES FEMALES
narrow point (few old
people). In contrast, the 80+
75-79
pyramid for France (2), 70-74
a developed country, 65-69
60-64
has a narrower base 55-59
and a wide middle, 50-54
45-49
denoting a low 40-44
birth rate and 35-39
30-34
many middle- 25-29
aged people. 20-24
15-19
10-14
5-9
0-4
238
Population growth and distribution CHARTS & TABLES
Population growth and distribution Over the past 2,000 years the
population of the world has
Hectares per person increased thirtyfold. At the
time of Christ there were over
65,385 hectares of space per
1 CE person. The rapid increase in
65,385 world population over the
past 150 years has been due to
improvements in medical
care, food resources and
production, longer life
2050 expectancy, and a lower infant
9.07 billion mortality rate.
1000 CE
34,413 1995
5.69 billion
1975
4 billion
1930
2000 CE
2 billion
2,093
2100 CE
934 1850
1 billion
1650
World population growth
500 million
239
CHARTS & TABLES Climatic changes
Climate change
Possible rises in
The greenhouse effect temperature by 2050 8–10oC 4–8oC 2–4oC
Heat from the Sun (1) enters
the atmosphere and heats the
Earth (2). The heat is reflected
(3) by the Earth’s surface and
some heat escapes into space
(4). In large quantities, certain
gases, such as carbon dioxide,
build up in the atmosphere and
trap some of the heat (5). If The
this happened to a greater greenhouse
degree, some of the polar ice effect
caps would melt and sea levels
would rise, flooding some 1
land. Scientists do not know
for certain if these temperature
rises will happen. Limits are Change in the size of the ozone hole over Antarctica
now being placed on carbon 7
dioxide emissions. In the mid- 2000 2001
21st century, temperatures
could rise as shown above
right. 4
240
Hertzsprung-Russell diagram CHARTS & TABLES
Hertzsprung-Russell diagram
Temperature °F (°C)
45,032 18,032 12,632 10,832 9,032 5,432
(25,000) (10,000) (7,000) (6,000) (5,000) (3,000)
Stars are also 1,000,000
categorized by
their absolute
magnitude or
brightness.
Supergiants e
There are four b
main types of star: 10,000
White dwarfs, a
Main sequence,
Giants, and
Supergiants.
The diagram c d
shows the 100
relationship Giants
Luminosity
between a star’s
spectrum and
its absolute
magnitude or Main sequence
luminosity
The Sun
(brightness). the Sun = 1
It also shows
the relationship
between
temperature
and color.
0.01
White dwarfs
0.0001
blue white yellow orange red
241
CHARTS & TABLES The planets
Average orbital 29.76 mi/sec 21.75 mi/sec 18.52 mi/sec 14.98 mi/sec 8.14 mi/sec
speed (47.9 km/sec) (35.0 km/sec) (29.8 km/sec) (24.1 km/sec) (13.1 km/sec)
Sidereal period 88 days 224.7 days 365.3 days 687 days 11.86 years
242
The planets CHARTS & TABLES
5.98 mi/sec 4.23 mi/sec 3.36 mi/sec 2.92 mi/sec 0.621 mi/sec Average orbital
(9.6 km/sec) (6.8 km/sec) (5.4 km/sec) (4.7 km/sec) (1 km/sec) speed
29.46 years 84.01 years 164.8 years 247.7 years Sidereal period
19 5 3 1 9 planets 0 Number of
satellites known
1,000- 9 0 0 0 0 Number of
rings known
243
CHARTS & TABLES The phases of the Moon, rotations, and tides
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
CHARTS & TABLES The phases of the Moon, rotations, and tides
244
Eclipses CHARTS & TABLES
Total eclipse of the Sun This can Partial eclipse of the Sun In this Annular ecipse of the Sun This type
last from a split second up to a type of eclipse, the Moon’s disk of eclipse, named from the Latin
maximum of 7 min 31 sec. The area obscures only part of the word annulus, meaning “ring,”
over which it is seen has a maximum photosphere. occurs if the Moon is at its farthest
width of 169 miles (272 km), but is point from the Earth and the Earth is
usually much less. The corona—the at its nearest point to the Sun. The
circle of light that appears as a halo Moon’s disk then appears slightly
around the Moon during this type of smaller than the photosphere.
eclipse—is visible to the naked eye.
245
CHARTS & TABLES The universe – Units of space measurement – Time
The universe
Astronomers estimate that
1 2 3
the universe is 13.7 billion
years old. It is expanding as
the galaxies and clusters of
galaxies move further away
from each other. 4 5 6 7
The cubes, right, represent the
enormous scale of the
universe. Each cube has sides
100 times as long as the sides
of the cube before it. The
length of the sides is in light- Units of space measurement
years (ly). Astronomical unit (au)
1 Cube side 950 au (0.015 ly). Mean Sun to Earth distance = 92,955,807 1 parsec
Contains the whole solar miles (149,597,870 km). Agreed
system. internationally in 1964 but value has
2 Cube side 1.5 ly. Contains altered.
Galactic coordinates 1 au Sun
the solar system surrounded 1 second
by the Oort cloud of comets. Relative location of our galaxy’s
components in latitude and longitude of arc
This cloud may be the source Earth
of many comets that pass (degrees and min) measured in relation to
through the solar system. It the celestial equator, which is a projection
surrounds the Sun at an of the Earth’s equator. Parsec (pc)
average distance of 40,000 au Light year (ly) The distance at which 1 au would
(2/3 ly). Distance traveled by light in a year = measure 1 sec of arc = 19.16 trillion
3 Cube side 150 ly. Contains 5.878 trillion miles (9.4605 trillion km) miles (30.857 trillion km) or 206,265 au
the solar system and the or 63,290 au. Defined in 1888. or 3.26 ly (1).
nearer stars.
4 Cube side 15,000 ly. Astronomical time
Contains the nearer spiral Time can be measured by motion; in fact, the motion of the Earth, Sun, Moon, and
arms of our galaxy. stars provided humans with the first means of measuring time.
5 Cube side 1.5 million ly.
Contains the whole of our Years, months, days
galaxy, the large and small Sidereal times are calculated by the Earth's position according to fixed stars. The
Magellanic Clouds, and other anomalistic year is measured according to the Earth's orbit in relation to the perihelion
nearby galaxies in the local (Earth's minimum distance to the Sun). Tropical times refer to the apparent passage of
group. the Sun and the actual passage of the Moon across the Earth's equatorial plane. The
6 Cube side 150 million ly. synodic month is based on the phases of the Moon. Solar time (as in a mean solar
Contains the whole of the day) refers to periods of darkness and light averaged over a year.
local group and the Pisces, Time Days Hours Minutes Seconds
Cancer, and Virgo clusters of Sidereal year 365 6 9 10
galaxies. Anomalistic year 365 6 13 53
7 Cube side 15 billion ly Tropical year 365 5 48 45
Sidereal month 27 7 43 11
Contains all the known Tropical month 27 7 43 5
clusters and superclusters of Synodic month 29 12 44 3
galaxies and all other known Mean solar day 0 24 0 0
objects in space. Sidereal day 0 23 56 4
246
Galaxies – Life cycle of a star CHARTS & TABLES
Galaxies
1 2 3 4
Galaxies are collections of stars and Galactic shapes 3 Elliptical These galaxies do not
planets and clouds of gas or dust that The four main classes are: have spiral arms. About 60% of
are isolated in the “emptiness” of 1 Spiral These galaxies resemble galaxies are elliptical, varying in
space—although a recent theory pinwheels, with spiral arms trailing shape from almost spherical (like a
suggests that much of space is out from a bright center. Our galaxy is soccer ball) to very flattened (like a
occupied by invisible dark matter. a spiral galaxy, and at its center is a football).
Most galaxies are found in groups, cluster of stars called the Milky Way. 4 Irregular About 10% of galaxies
and very few are found on their own. 2 Barred spiral Here, the spiral arms are irregular with no definite shape.
They are classified by their shape. trail from the ends of a central bar.
About 30% of galaxies are spirals or
barred spirals.
247
CHARTS & TABLES Elements – Periodic table of the elements
248
Elements by groups – Electron arrangement of atoms CHARTS & TABLES
249
CHARTS & TABLES Biographies
Discovery of the elements: Actinium – Cesium
250
Discovery of the elements: Chlorine – Hydrogen CHARTS & TABLES
251
CHARTS & TABLES Biographies
Discovery of the elements: Indium – Oxygen
252
Discovery of the elements: Palladium – Strontium CHARTS & TABLES
253
CHARTS & TABLES Discovery of the elements: Sulfur – Zirconium
254
Minerals: crystal systems CHARTS & TABLES
Cubic
(isometric) all equal 90°
Halite
Zircon
Sulfur
Orthoclase
Albit
255
CHARTS &TABLES Scales of hardness
Scales of hardness
Mohs’ scale of hardness Field scale of hardness
(below) Each reference mineral
scratches all those with
lower numbers. Scratches quartz
10 Diamond
6 Orthoclase
Easily scratched by knife
5 Apatite
Scratched by penny
4 Fluorite
Scratched by fingernail
3 Calcite
1 Talc
256
SECTION
SEVEN
ASSOCIATIONS
257
ASSOCIATIONS Earth science
258
Earth science ASSOCIATIONS
c/o Adonna Fleming, 207A Love Library, National Oceanic and Atmospheric
University of Nebraska–Lincoln, Lincoln, Administration
Nebraska 68588 Government agency formed to understand and predict
Tel. 402-472-3920 changes in the Earth’s environment and conserve and
http://www.geoinfo.org/ manage coastal and marine resources to meet U.S.
Mineralogical Society of America economic, social, and environmental needs.
Society formed for the advancement of mineralogy, 14th St. and Constitution Ave., N.W., Washington,
crystallography, geochemistry, and petrology, and for DC 20230
the promotion of their uses in other sciences, industry, Tel. 202-482-6090
and the arts. http://www.noaa.gov/index.html
3635 Concorde Pkwy, Chantilly, VA 20151 North American Association for Environmental
Tel.702-652-9950 Education (NAAEE)
http://www.minsocam.org/ Network of professionals, students, and volunteers
National Aeronautics and Space Administration formed to promote a cooperative, nonconfrontational,
Government agency established to explore the scientifically-balanced approach to education about
Universe and search for life; extend Earth system environmental issues.
science, and “inspire the next generation of explorers.” 2000 P Street, N.W., Washington, DC 20036
NASA Headquarters, Suite 1M32, Washington, DC Tel. 202-419-0412
20546 http://naaee.org/pages/index.html
Tel. 202-358-0001 Seismology Society of America
http://www.nasa.gov/home/index.html Scientific society devoted to the advancement of
National Association of Black Geologists and earthquake science.
Geophysicists (NABGG) 201 Plaza Professional Building, El Cerrito, CA
Formed to increase minority representation in the 94530
geosciences through partnerships with academia and Tel. 510-525-5474
by mentoring undergraduate and graduate students. http://www.seismosoc.org/
4212 San Felipe, Houston, TX 77027 Society for Sedimentary Geology (SEPM)
http://www.nabgg.com/ Nonprofit society dedicated to the dissemination of
National Association of Geoscience Teachers scientific information on sedimentology, stratigraphy,
Organization established to foster improvement in the paleontology, environmental sciences, marine geology,
teaching of Earth sciences at all levels of formal and hydrogeology, and other related specialties.
informal instruction, to emphasize the cultural 6128 E. 38th St., Tulsa, OK 74135
significance of the Earth sciences and to disseminate Tel. 918-610-3361; 800-865-9765
knowledge in this field to the general public. http://www.sepm.org/
31 Crestview Drive, Napa, CA 94558 Society of Vertebrate Paleontology
Tel. 707-427-8864 Society formed to advance the science of vertebrate
http://www.nagt.org/ paleontology; facilitate the cooperation of all persons
National Earth Science Teachers Association concerned with the history, evolution, comparative
Nonprofit organization formed for the “advancement, anatomy, and taxonomy of vertebrate animals; and
stimulation, extension, improvement, and coordination preserve fossil sites.
of Earth science education at all educational levels.” 60 Revere Dr., Northbrook, IL 60062
4784 Four Seasons Drive, Liverpool, NY 13088 Tel. 847-480-9095
http://www.nestanet.org/ http://www.vertpaleo.org/
259
ASSOCIATIONS Earth science – General scientific
260
SECTION
EIGHT
WEB SITES
261
WEB SITES Earth science
262
Earth science – General Web sites WEB SITES
Planetary Science Research Discoveries aspects of water. Includes pictures, data, maps, and
NASA Cosmochemistry Program/Hawai’i an interactive center.
Space Grant Consortium Latest research on http://ga.water.usgs.gov/edu/
meteorites, planets, and other solar system bodies
being made by NASA-sponsored scientists. GENERAL WEB SITES
http://www.psrd.hawaii.edu/PSRDabout.html American Association for the Advancement of
Storm Encyclopedia Science (AAAS)
Weather Channel Answers questions on severe Information on scientific developments and
and extreme weather. education programs for all ages.
http://www.weather.com/encyclopedia/ http://www.aaas.org
Understanding Geologic Time Exploratorium
University of California Museum of Produced by San Francisco’s interactive
Paleontology Informational tour giving users a Exploratorium science museum, the site contains
basic understanding of geologic time, the evidence experiments, exhibits, and sound and video files
for events in Earth’s history, relative and absolute exploring hundreds of different topics.
dating techniques, and the significance of the http://www.exploratorium.edu
Geologic Time Scale. How Stuff Works
http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/historyoflife/ HSW Media Network Extensive resource of
histoflife.html individual tutorials in Earth science, engineering,
USGS physical science, life science, and space.
U.S. Geological Survey Detailed information on http://science.howstuffworks.com/
Earth science. Includes “The Learning Web,” an National Science Digital Library (NSDL)
educational component for students and teachers, National Science Foundation Giant database of
as well as an “Ask the Expert” feature. links to quality resources and services supporting
http://www.usgs.gov/ science education at all levels.
USGS Earthquake Hazards Program http://nsdl.org/
U.S. Geological Survey Comprehensive, clear, NOVA: Science in the News
information on the latest earthquakes, current Australian Academy of Science Information on
earthquake research, and seismology. Includes scientific principles and concepts in the headlines.
“Ask a Geologist” and science fair projects. http://www.science.org.au/nova/
http://quake.wr.usgs.gov/info/basics.html
Quiz Hub
The Virtual Earth Schmidel & Wojcik Learning center with quizzes,
Phillip Ingram Survey of links in Earth science. homework help, resources, and interactive games.
http://teachserv.earth.ox.ac.uk/resources/ http://quizhub.com/
v_earth.html
Science Learning Network (SLN)
Volcano Expedition from the Field in Costa Rica Links to an international group of inquiry-based
Scripps Institution of Oceanography Explains science museums and web sites as well as
how volcanoes work, offers images of volcanoes educators’ hotlists.
and describes the expedition. Includes a Q&A http://sln.fi.edu/org/
section on volcanoes.
http://www.sio.ucsd.edu/volcano/ ScienceMaster
News, information, links, columns, and homework
Water Science for Schools help in all major areas of science.
U.S. Geological Survey Information on many http://www.sciencemaster.com/
263
WEB SITES General Web sites – Teacher resources – Equipment suppliers
Science News for Kids weather to teach math and science, and an
Science Service Suggestions for hands-on extensive resource guide to print and electronic
activities, books, articles, Web resources, and other materials.
useful materials for students ages 9–13. http://www.nssl.noaa.gov/resources/
http://www.sciencenewsforkids.org/ Science NetLinks
Scientific American.com Resources for K–12 science educators, including
Scientific American Latest news in science as lesson plans and reviewed internet resources.
well as an “Ask the Experts” feature. http://www.sciencenetlinks.com/
http://www.sciam.com Wright Center for Science Education
Society for Amateur Scientists Creates and shares novel instructional techniques
Hotlists for a variety of disciplines as well as and interdisciplinary resources for teachers.
science hobbyists, science suppliers, science http://www.tufts.edu/as/wright_center/
education stores, scientific organizations, science
books, magazines, and newsletters.
http://www.sas.org EQUIPMENT SUPPLIERS
ThinkQuest Library Carolina Biological Supply Company
Oracle ThinkQuest Education Foundation Science equipment and teacher resources.
Links to hundreds of scientific sites on the Web. http://www.carolina.com
http://library.thinkquest.org Fisher Science Education
Science equipment and teacher resources.
http://www.fishersci.com/education/index.jsp
TEACHER RESOURCES Frey Scientific
Curriculu Center: Discoveryschool.com Science equipment and teacher resources.
Classroom activities for core curriculum topics. http://www.freyscientific.com/index.jsp
http://school.discovery.com/curriculumcenter/
NSTA’s Suppliers Guide
Education and Teacher Resources National Science Teachers Association Listing of
Geological Society of America Earth science suppliers of textbooks, reference works, computer
lesson plans and other teacher resources. programs, curriculum kits, and lab equipment.
http://www.geosociety.org/educate/ http://suppliers.nsta.org
Education World: The Educator’s Best Friend RadioShack
Links, lesson plans, practical information for Electronic parts, batteries, and accessories.
educators, information on using technology in the http://www.radioshack.com/home/index.jsp
classroom, articles by education experts, site
reviews, daily features, and columns. ScienceLab.com
http://www.education-world.com Discount supplier of science education materials
and laboratory equipment.
National Science Teachers Association http://www.sciencelab.com
Information on the teaching of science, including
links to teacher recommended Web sites. Ward’s Natural Science
http://www.nsta.org Materials for high and college biology and geology
classes, also life, environmental, Earth, and
Resources for Teachers physical science studies in grades 5 through 9.
National Severe Storms Laboratory Resources http://www.wardsci.com
for teachers, including data sets, ideas for using
264
Abbe – Chamberlin INDEX
265
INDEX Chambers – Eichler
266
Einstein – Gregor INDEX
Eichler, August W., 162 208–209 Fourier, Jean, 207 Geomagnetic variations, 156
Einstein, Albert, 177 Chambers’ theory, 156 Fracastoro, Girolamo, 194, 209, Geomagnetism, 173
Eisner, Thomas, 217 co-evolution, 219 210 Geometry, non-Euclidean, 166
Ekeberg, Andres, 254 Darwinian (natural selection), Franklin, Benjamin, 165 Geomorphology, 167
Ekman, Vagn W., 162–163 159–160, 172, 175, 199 Friedman, Herbert, 214 founder of, 160
Eldredge, Niles, 209 Darwin’s opponents, 182 Friedman, Irving, 210 term introduced, 182–183
Electric charge, 162 Gould’s theory, 168 Frisch, Karl von, 165 see also Landform studies
Electricity, 165 Mayr’s theories, 179–180 Fuchsia, genus, 165 Georges-Louis Leclerc,
static, 195 Ewing, William M., 164 Fuchs, Leonhard, 154, 165 Comte de Buffon, 196
Electric waves, 153 Explorer 1, 189 Fuschl, George C., 197 Geosyncline, term coined, 159
Electron arrangement of atoms, Explorer 6, 202 Gadolin, Johan, 254 Geothermal power, 202
249 Fabry, Charles, 200, 212 Gahn, Johan G., 252 Geothermal vents, 203
Elements, 157, 248–254 Fahrenheit, Daniel G., 196, 214 Galactic coordinates, 246 Gerard, John, 167
by groups, 249 Fahrenheit scale, 214 Galaxies, 209 Gesellschaft für
classification, 200 Faraday, Michael, 160 accelerating recession, 172 Schwerionenforschung see GSI
discovery of, 250–254 Faults, 227 classification, 201, 209 Gesner, Conrad, 167
the four, 163 Ferrel, William, 164 elliptical, 201, 247 Ghiorso, Albert, 250, 251, 252,
geochemical migration of, Fersman, Aleksandr Y., 201 irregular, 201 253
201 Fibonacci, Leonardo, 164 movement, 209 Gilbert, Grove K., 167
law of octaves, 181 Fibonacci series, 164 rotating, 182 Gilbert, William, 195
periodic table, 248–249 Fish, 168 shapes, 247 Gill, Theodore N., 167
Elhuyar y de Suvisa, Fausto and see also Ichthyology spiral, 201, 247 Glacial lakes, 166
José d’, 254 Fitzgerald, George, 177 see also Milky Way Glacial theory, 156
Elsasser, Walter M., 163 Fitzgerald-Lorentz contraction, Galdikas, Birute, 218 Glaciers, 148, 157, 198
Elton, Charles S., 163, 216 177 Galilei, Galileo, 165, 194, 195, Glendenin, Lawrence, 253
Emiliani, Cesare, 163 Fitzroy, Robert, 164–165 210, 211, 212, 213, 214 Global resources, 216
Empedocles, 163 Flamsteed, John, 165, 196 Galle, Johann G., 166, 177 Global warming, 175, 203, 209
Endangered species, 218–219 Flat Earth, 149 Galton, Francis, 199, 214 concept formulated, 200
Energy, alternate and Flerov, Georgy, 251, 253 Gamow, George, 166, 176, 201 Goebel, Karl I.E. von, 167
renewable sources, 216 Flood, biblical, 178 Gas Goethe, Johann W. von, 167–
Energy supplies, world, 216 Flora refractive indices, 152 168
Entropy, 157 Australian, 151 word invented, 170 Goldberg, Edward D., 217
Environmental change, global, British, 151 Gassendi, Pierre, 166, 206 Gomez-Pompa, Arturo, 218
220 Flower symmetry, 162 Gauss, Carl F., 166 Goodall, Jane, 218
Environmental damage, 202 Folds, geological, 227 Gaussian coordinates, 166 Goode, George B., 168
Environmental quality Food chain, 163, 209 Gautier, Henri, 196, 208 Goodricke, John, 206
standards, 216 Food-web ecology, 219 Gay-Lussac, Joseph-L., 152, Gorillas, 218
Eocene period, 198, 208 Food webs, 219 197, 250 Gould, Stephen J., 168, 209
Eons, 222 Forbes, Edward, 165 Geer, Gerard J. de, 166 Graben, 227
Ephemeridical unit, 201 Forel, François-Alphonse, 200 Geiger, Rudolf, 201, 211 Grafting, 154
Epicurus, 163 Forests Geikie, Sir Archibald, 166–167 Grand Canyon, 184
Epochs, 222 clear cutting, 218 Gellibrand, Henry, 167, 195, Gravitation, 181–182, 195, 209
Equilibrium model, 209 see also Tropical forests 211 Newton’s law of, 187
Equinoxes, precession of, 171 Fossils, 148, 156, 167, 179, 186, Gene, term introduced, 174 quantum theory of, 170
Eras, 222 87, 192, 194, 203, 209 Genetics, 188 speed of falling bodies, 165
Eratosthenes, 163–164, 192, and age of rocks, 154, 163, Genotype, term introduced, Gray, Asa, 168
193 182, 185, 186 174 Gray’s Manual, 168
Erosion, 208 of apes, 176 Geological maps, 196, 209 Great Barrier Reef, 190
concept formulated, 193 of dinosaurs, 157, 208 Geological Society of London, “Great Wall,” of galaxies, 203
cycle of, 160 of human ancestors, 161, 174, 197 Greenhouse effect, 209
Escher von der Linth, Arnold, 176, 202–203 Geological time, 171–172, 222 discovered, 199
198 and rock strata, 151, 178–179, Geology, 209 Greenhouse gases, 217
Eskola, Pentti E., 164 197 founder of British, 186 Green movement, 202
Espy, James P., 164 term coined, 148, 194 “new,” 187 Green revolution in agriculture,
Ethology, 165 and William Smith, 197 term coined, 197 153
founders of, 177–178, 188 zone, 182 uniformitarianism, 214 Greenwich meridian, 199
Evolution, 154, 157, 189, 192, Foucault, Léon, 199, 208, 209 see also Rocks Gregorich, Kenneth, 254
267
INDEX Gregory – Life on Earth
Gregor, William, 168, 254 Hisinger, Wilhelm, 171, 250 see also Fish 157
Gregory, David, 196 Hjelm, Peter J., 252 Igneous rocks, 173, 197, 225 Kirchhoff, Gustav, 154, 250,
Grew, Nehemiah, 168 Hofmann, Sigurd, 254 Impetus, concept of, 194 253
Gross fetal abnormalities, 148– Holdren, John P., 219 Imprinting, 177–178 Klaproth, Martin, 250, 254
149 Holmes, Arthur, 171–172 Inheritance of characteristics, Knight, Andrew, 175
Groundwater treatment, 217 Hominids, early, see Human 158, 175 Koop, C. Everett, 217
GSI, 250, 251, 252, 253, 254 ancestors Interferometer, 181 Köppen, Wladimir, 199, 207,
Guettard, Jean-E., 168, 209 Homo erectus, 176, 203 Invertebrates, 175 211
Guldberg, Cato M., 199 Homo habilis, 176 Ionosphere, 156, 200, 210 Kremer, Gerhard (Gerardus
Gulf Stream, 165 Homologs, 151 Iridium, 149 Mercator), 175, 194, 211
Gutenberg, Beno, 168, 184 Homo sapiens, age of, 203 Iron, cast, 193 Kuiper Belt, 204
Gyroscope, 199, 209 Honeybees, 165 Island biogeography, 216 Kuiper, Gerard P., 175
Haagen-Smit, Arie Jan, 216 Hong Yee Chiu, 212 Isomerism, theory of, 152 Kyoto agreement, 203
Hadley, George, 169, 196 Hooker, Sir Joseph D., 172 Isostasy, 148, 162, 200 Lacaille, Nicolas-L. de, 175,
Haeckel, Ernst, 208 Hooke, Robert, 206, 208 Isotope dating methods, 159 196
Hahn, Otto, 253 Hooker, Sir William J., 172 Isotopes, 185–186 Lakes, 200, 217
Hales, Stephen, 169 Horst, 227 James, Ralph, 250, 251 see also Limnology
Hall, Asaph, 169 Horton, Robert E., 172 Jansky, Karl G., 201, 212 Lamarck, Jean-B.-P.-.A. de M.,
Halley, Edmund, 169, 196, 210, Howard, Luke, 207 Janssen, Pierre-J.-C., 173, 251 Chevalier de, 175, 208
214 Hoyle, Sir Fred, 172 Java man, 161 Lamb, Hubert H., 175
Halley’s comet, 169, 193, 210 Hubbard Brook Ecosystem Jay, Steller, 186 Landform development, 161,
Hall, Sir James, 169, 197 Study, 218 Jeffreys and Bullen tables, 201, 183
Halloy see Omalius d’Halloy Hubble, Edwin P., 150, 172, 203 Landform studies, 167
Hardness, Mohs’ scale, 181, 201, 209 Jeffreys, Sir Harold, 173–174, see also Geomorphology
256 Hubble space telescope, 172 201 Landsat satellite, 202
Harrison, John, 169–170, 197, Huggins, Sir William, 173 Jeffries, John, 197 Landscape analysis, 200
210 Human ancestors, 176, 199, Jet stream, discovered, 201 Lapworth, Charles, 175–176
Harvard College, 198 202, 203 JINR (Joint Institute for Larsh, Almon, 252
Harvey, Bernard, 251, 252 Humboldt, F.W.K.H. Nuclear Research), 250, 251, Lartet, Édouard-A.-I.-H., 176
Hatchett, Charles, 170, 252 Alexander von, 173, 197, 210 253, 254 Latimer, Robert, 252
Haüy, René J., 211 Humidity, atmospheric, 159 Johansen, Donald C., 174, 202 Latitude, 163–164, 171, 193,
Hawking, Stephen W., 170, 204 Hurricane Katrina, 204 Johanssen, Wilhelm L., 174 210, 236
Hays, James D., 170 Hurricane Mitch, 203–204 Johnston, Harold S., 216 Laurasia, 224
Heaviside, Oliver, 200, 210 Hurricanes, structure, 198 Joint Institute for Nuclear Lavoisier, Antoine, 206
Heliocentric universe Hutchinson, G. Evelyn, 216 Research see JINR Lawrence Berkeley National
(heliocentricity), 152, 210 Hutton, James, 173, 183–184 Joly, John, 174 Laboratory (LBNL), 251, 253,
Helium, 182, 184 Huxley, Sir Julian S., 173 Joule, James, 157 254
Helmont, Jan B. van, 170 Huxley, Thomas H., 172 Jupiter, 155, 184–185, 195, 210 Lead contamination, 218
Heredity, 189 Hybridization, 154 data, 242–243 Leakey, Louis S.B., 176
see also Inheritance of Hydration dating, 210 moons/satellites, 150, 204, Leakey, Mary D., 176, 202,
characteristics Hydrologic cycle, 195, 210 210 203
Herren, Hans, 220 Hydrology, of Mediterranean, Jurassic period, 154, 173, 197, Leakey, Richard E.F., 176,
Herschel, Caroline L., 170, 197 200 210, 223 203
Herschel, Sir Frederick W., 171, Hygrometer, invented, 159 Jussieu, Antoine-L. de, 174 Leavitt, Henrietta S., 171,
209, 214 Ice Kapteyn, Jacobus C., 174, 209 176
Herschel, Sir John F.W., 171 Arctic sea, 162–163 Keeling, Charles David, 220 Lecoq de Boisbaudran, Paul-
Hertzsprung, Ejnar, 171, 213 glacier, 218, 220 Kelvin, Lord see Thomson, Émile, 157, 251, 253
Hertzsprung-Russell diagram, polar, 218 William Leibniz, Gottfried, 181–182
241 Ice ages, 148, 158, 159, 163, Kennedy, Joseph, 253 Lemaître, Georges-H., 166,
Hesperia, 185 182–183, 198, 210 Kennelly, Arthur, 210 176, 201, 206
Hess, Henry (Harry) H., 171, Ice archive, 218 Kennelly-Heaviside layer, 210 Leopards, snow, 218
202 Icebergs, 200 Kepler, Johannes, 152, 174–175, Leucippus, 177
Hevelius, Johannes, 171 Ice calorimeter, 154 195, 212 Leverrier, Urbain-J.-J., 166,
Hevesy, Georg von, 158, 251 Ice cores, from tropical glaciers, Kew Gardens, 150, 151, 172 177
Hewish, Anthony, 212 220 Kinetic energy, term coined, Libby, Willard F., 201, 207
High-particle physics, 149 Ice sheet, dating of, 156 158 Life on Earth
Hipparchus, 171, 193 Ichthyology, 167, 168 Kinetic theory of gases, 156, early evidence, 202, 203
268
Light – Nielson INDEX
experiments on origins, 180 poles, 167, 173, 194, 211 transit of, 169, 171 Monsoon winds, 231
Light reversals, 202, 211 Meridian, prime, 199 Moon, 211
aberration of, 153 satellite maps, 203 Mesozoic era, 223 distance and size, 193
rotation of plane-polarized, strength, 162 Messier, Charles, 180 eclipses, 157–158, 245
152 Magnetic storms, 156 Metals, De Re Metallica, 148 first human on, 202
speed of, 181, 184–185 Magnetism, 162 Metamorphic rocks, 164, 169, lunar motions, 195
Lightning, 165 Magnus, Albertus, 250 225 map, 171
Lightning conductors, 165 Maillet, Benoit de, 179, 196 Meteorites, 160 phases, 244
Light year, 246 Mallet, Robert, 198 and dinosaur extinction, surface, 195, 211
Likens, Gene E., 218 Mantell, Gideon A., 179 149 and tides, 184, 244
Limestone, 169 Mantell, Mary, 197, 208 hypotheses, 177 Morgan, Leon, 250
Limnologist, theoretical, 217 Map projections, 175, 193, 237 Meteorological maps see Morgan, William, 209
Limnology Maps, 163–164, 211 Maps Morley, Edward W., 181
first textbook on, 200 early geological, 196 Meteorology Mosander, Carl G., 251, 252,
see also Lakes with grid, 193 American pioneer of, 148 254
Lindblad, Bertil, 211 meteorological or weather, dynamical, 199 Moscow Papyrus, 192
Lind, James, 197 177, 196, 198, 199, 214, 233 Meteors, 178, 185, 211 Mosquitoes, eradication of,
Linnaeus, Carolus (Carl von temperature zones, 199 Michel, Helen, 149 220
Linné), 177 Map symbols Michell, John, 208 Mountain ranges, 152, 198
Linth see Escher von der Linth topographic, 236 Michelson, Albert, 181 Mountains
Lions, 218 weather, 233 Michelson-Morley experiment, folds (nappes), 198
Lippershey, Hans, 195, 213 Marbut, Curtis F., 179 177, 181 structure, 151
Lisbon, earthquake, 196 Marco Polo, 194 Microclimatology, 201, 211 world distribution, 228
Lithosphere, term coined, 150 Margalith, Yoel, 220 Micropaleontology, 182 Müller, Franz Joseph, 254
Lithospheric plates, 226 Marignac, Jean-Charles de, 251, Microprobe, invented, 201 Münster, Sebastian, 194
see also Tectonic plates 254 Milky Way, 150, 171, 209, Münzenberg, Gottfried, 251,
Lockyer, Sir Joseph N., 177, Marine biology, 187 211 252
251 Marinsky, Jacob, 253 Miller, Stanley, 180 Murchison, Sir Roderick I., 181,
Loess, 156 Mars Miller, William H., 180 198, 207, 212, 213
Longitude, 163–164, 169–170, canals, 178, 185 Milne, John, 180, 199, 213 Nappe folds (nappes), 198, 227
171, 193, 194, 197, 210, 236 data, 242–243 Mineralogy, 158, 181 Natural gas, early use in China,
Loomis, Elias, 177, 198, 214 moons, 169 experimental, 201 192
Lorentz, Hendrik A., 177 periods of, 155 high-pressure, high- Natural selection, 168, 189,
Lorenz, Konrad Z., 177–178, Marsh, Othniel C., 179 temperature, 197 208–209
188 Marsili, Luigi F., 179 Minerals, 151 Nature reserves, 219
Lorius, Claude, 218 Mathematical projection, 237 classification, 159, 181, Naudin, Charles, 181
Love, Augustus E.H., 178, Matter, early theories of, 149, 197–198, 211 Neanderthal Man, 199
200 160–161, 163 crystal systems, 255 Neap tides, 244
Lovejoy, Thomas E., 219 Maury, Matthew F., 179, 199, hardness, 197–198, 211 Nebulae, 169, 170, 171, 173,
Lovell, Sir Alfred C.B., 178 212 vein locations, 194 180
Love waves, 178 Mayr, Ernst W., 179–180 Miocene period, 198, 211 Neogene period, 223
Lowell, Percival, 178 McCarty, Perry L., 217 Miranda, 175 Neptune, 148, 166, 175, 177
Lower Silurian system, 175–176 McMillan, Edwin, 252 “Missing link” between apes data, 242–243
Luc, Jean A. de, 178 Mealybug, eradication of, 220 and humans, 161 Neptunism, 190, 211
Lucretius, 163, 177, 178 Meinwald, Jerrold, 217 Mohl, Hugo von, 180–181 Nereid, 175
“Lucy,” hominid skeleton, 174 Meitner, Lise, 253 Mohn, Henrik, 199 Neutron star, 204, 212
Lunar tides, 156 Mendeleyev, Dmitry I., 180, 181 Moho discontinuity, 181 Newlands, John A.R., 181
Lung cancer, and cigarettes, Mendel, Gregor, 188 Mohorovi c̆i ć, Andrija, 181 Newton, Sir Isaac, 181–182
220 Mendelian genetics, 189 Mohs, Friedrich, 181, 197–198, and Earth’s shape, 208
Lyell, Sir Charles, 178–179, Mercalli, Giuseppe, 180 211 laws of motion, 196
198, 208, 211, 212, 213, 214 Mercalli scale, 180, 227 Mohs’ scale of hardness, 181, law of universal gravitation,
Mackenzie, K.R., 250 Mercator, Gerardus see Kremer, 211, 256 187, 195, 196, 209
Magnetic compass, 193, 194 Gerhard Moissan, Henri, 251 and lunar motions, 195
Magnetic field, Earth’s, 162, Mercator projection, 193, 194, Molecular shape, 152 and planetary masses, 212
166 211 Molecule, term introduced, and planetary orbits, 196
at high altitudes, 152 Mercury 166 reflecting telescope, 213
declinations, 196 data, 242–243 Molina, Mario J., 159, 216 Niche, concept, 163
269
INDEX Nilson – Roemer
Nielson, N., 200 existence proved, 200, 212 Plant physiology, 169 Quaternary period, 223
Nilson, Lars F., 253 Packe, Christopher, 196 Plants Radioactive carbon tracers, 155
Ninov, Victor, 254 Paleoclimatology, 156 breeding, 217, 219 Radioactive dating, 150
Nitrogen oxides, 159, 216 Paleogene period, 223 classification, 155, 156, 174 Radio astronomy, 178, 201, 212
Noble gases, 184 Paleozoic era, 223 collectors of, 187, 188 Radio interferometer, 212
Noddack, Ida, 182 Palmieri, Luigi, 213 cultivation, 188 Radiolaria, 170
Noddack, Walter, 182, 253, 254 Panda, 218 early catalog, 150 Radiometer, 159
Nuclear winter, 217, 218–219 Pangaea, 224 and external stimuli, 75 Radio stars, 150
Nucleus, first named, 154 Parker, Eugene, 202 growth and sensitivity, 153 Radio telescope, 212
Observatory, first official in Parsec, 246 heredity in, 189 Radio waves, extraterrestrial,
U.S., 198 Pascal, Blaise, 195, 206 hybridization, 181 201
Ocean currents, 162–163, 200, Paschen, Louis, 182 impregnation, 154 Radon, 161, 184
232 Patrick, Ruth, 216 male and female Rainforests see Tropical forests
and winds, 179 Patterson, Clair C., 218 reproductive organs, 155 Ramsay, Sir William, 184, 250,
Oceanography, 212 Pedology, 199 organization, 174, 187 252, 254
first textbook on, 199 Penck, Albrecht, 182–183, 183 pigments, 188 Ramus, Petrus, 194
pioneers of, 162–163, 187 Penck, Walther, 183 taxonomy of higher, 162 Rare earths, 157
Oceans, 164, 187 Pendulum, 194, 199, 212 variation in, 189 Raven, Peter H., 218, 219
depths, 151, 179 Peniplane, 160 Plate tectonics see Tectonic Rayleigh, Lord see Strutt, John
floors, 171, 201 Penzias, Arno, 166 plates Rayleigh waves, 199, 213
pollution, 217 Perey, Marguerite, 251 Plato, 192 Reber, Grote, 212
role in global climate, 220 Periodic table of the elements, Playfair, John, 183–184 Recent period, 198, 213
temperatures and pressures, 180, 248–249 Pleistocene, European, 182–183 Redfield, William, 198
179 Periods, geological, 222, 223 Pliny the Younger, 184, 193 Red Latinoamericana de
Ocean vents, 202 Permian period, 198, 212, 223 Pliocene period, 198, 212 Botánica, 220
Octaves, law of, 181 Perrault, Pierre, 195, 210 Pluto, 153, 178, 188, 212 Reich, Ferdinand, 252
Odum, Eugene P., 216 Pesticide pollution, 218–219 data on, 242–243 Relativity, special theory of,
Oenopides, 192 Petrography, microscopical, 199 Plutonism, 183–184 177
Oeschger, Hans, 218 Petroleum geology, 200 Pogson, Norman R., 213 Revelle, Roger R., 216
Oganessian, Yuri, 250, 253, 254 Petrology, 199 Poincaré, Jules-Henri, 200 Reverse fault, 227
Oil wells, 161 Pfeffer, Wilhelm F.P., 183 Polar climate zone, 230 Rhododendron, 172
Oldham, Richard D., 182, 200 Phanerozoic eon, 223 Polar ice, 218 Rice, 219
Olduvai Gorge, 176 Phenotype, 174 Pollution, chemical, 220 Richer, Jean, 184, 195, 208
Omalius d’Halloy, Jean-B.-J. d’, Phillips, William, 198, 207 Population distribution, 239 Richter, Charles F., 184, 201,
182, 197, 207 Philolaus, 183, 192 Population genetics, 179–180 213
Oncoviruses, 152–153 Photometer, meridian, 199 Population growth, 219, 239 Richter scale, 180, 201, 213,
Oort, Jan H., 182, 211 Photosynthesis, 155 Population structure, 238 227
Oppel, Albert, 182 Piazzi, Giuseppe, 206 Powell, John W., 184 Richter, Theodor, 252
Optical lenses, 166 Picard, Jean, 183, 195, 208 Precambrian eons, 204, 223 Rio, Andrés Manuel del, 186,
Orangutans, 218 Piccard, Auguste, 206 Precession of the equinoxes, 171 254
Orbigny, Alcide-C.-V. D. d’, Pickering, Edward C., 183, 199 Priestley, Joseph, 252 River basin hydrology, 172
182 Pithecanthropus erectus, 161 Progressivism, 157 River basin management, 217
Ordovician period, 175–176, Planetesimal theory, 156 Projections see Map Rivers
223 Planets, 153 projections development, 167
Organisms, classification of, data, 242–243 Proterozoic eon, 223 erosion, 196, 208
179–180 formation of terrestrial, 204 Proton linear accelerator, 149 protection, 217
Ørsted, Hans C., 250 masses, 212 Protoplasm, 180–181 U.S., 216
Ortelius, Abraham, 194, 211 most distant, 204 Protoplasts, 183 and valleys, 183
Osmosis, 180–181, 183 movement, 194, 212 Protostars, 247 RNA enzymatic function, 180
Over fold, 227 orbits, 166, 174–175, 196, Ptolemy, 184 Rock cycle, 225
Owen, Sir Richard, 182, 208 201, 212 Pulsar, first discovered, 151 Rocks
Oxygen isotope analysis, 163 origin, 156 Pyrometer, invented, 159 and fossils, 151, 197
Oyster physiology, 190 perturbations, 148, 169, 177 Pythagoras, 192, 208 metamorphic formations, 164
Ozone hole or depletion, 159, solar system’s 10th, 204 Pytheas, 184 sedimentary, 150, 186, 186–
202, 203, 216, 240 Plant anatomy, early research, Quantum theory of gravity, 170 187, 190, 225
illustration, 240 168 Quaoar, 204 weight of, 162
Ozone layer, 212, 217, 240 Plant ecology, 187 Quasar, 212 see also Geology
270
Rosenbusch – Tyle INDEX
Roemer, Olaus, 184–185 Snider-Pellegrini, Antonio, 199, Stellar distances, 171 Temperate climate zone, 230
Rosenbusch, Harry, 199 207 Stellar parallax, 174 Temperature scales, 214
Rowland, F. Sherwood, 159, Soddy, Frederick, 253 Stellar photometry, 183 Temperature zones, world map
216 Soil Steller, Georg W., 186 of, 211
Rowland-Molina hypothesis, classification, 179 Steno, Nicolaus (Niels Stensen), Tennant, Smithson, 252
216 erosion, 166–167, 184 186–187, 213 Terrestrial sediments, 220
Russell, Henry N., 185 fertility, 218 Steward, Balfour, 210 Tertiary period, 149, 223
Rutherford, Daniel, 185, 252 formation, 179 Strabo, 193 Thales, 187
Sagan, Carl E., 185 Soil science, 161 Stratigraphy, 197, 198, 213 Thénard, Louis-Jacques, 250
Sandage, Allan, 212 Solar, see also Sun Stratosphere, 200, 213 Theophrastus, 187, 192
Saturn, 213 Solar parallax, 155, 169 Street, Kenneth, 250 Thermodynamics, 157
data, 242–243 Solar system, 182, 186 Stroboscope, 198, 213 Thermometer, 196, 214
rings, 155, 195 Solar wind, 202 Strohmeyer, Friedrich, 250 Thompson, Lonnie G., 220
satellites, 155 Solar year, 171 Strong, Maurice, 216 Thompson, Stanley, 250, 251,
Saussure, Horace-B. de, 185, Soret, Jacques-L., 251 Strutt, John (Lord 252
197, 209 Southern California Edison Rayleigh), 199, 213, 250 Thomson, Sir Charles W., 187
Schaller, George, 218 Company, 216 Struve, Friedrich G.W. von, Thomson, William (later
Scheele, Carl, 252 Space-time, 170 187 Lord Kelvin), 199
Schiaparelli, Giovanni V., 178, Species extinction, 218 Stumm, Werner, 217 Thunberg, Carl P., 187
185 Spectroscopic analysis, 173 Succession, 213 Tides, 160, 164, 184, 200, 244
Schleiden, Matthias J., 185 Springs, 195 Suess, Eduard, 187 Tigers, 218
Schlotheim, Ernst von, 185 Spring tides, 244 Sun Time
Schultes, Richard E., 217 Stampfer, Simon von, 198, 213 as center of universe, astronomical, 246
Seaborg, Glenn T., 185–186, Star catalogs, 152, 154, 165, 157–158, 194, 210 geological, 222
250, 251, 252, 253 170, 171, 174, 183, 192, 196, see also Copernican periods, 223
Sea-floor spreading, 201, 202 197, 198 theory; Copernicus space-time, 170
Sedgwick, Adam, 186, 198, 207 Star maps, 194 distances of planets Tinbergen, Nikolaas, 188
Sedimentary rocks, 150, 186, Stars from, 242–243 Tombaugh, Clyde W., 178, 188,
186–187, 225 age of, 172 eccentric path, 171 212
Sedimentation, 193 binary, 187, 206 eclipses, 187, 192, 193, Topographic map symbols, 236
Sefström, Nils G., 186, 254 brightness, 155, 171, 176, 196, 245 Torricelli, Evangelista, 195, 206
Segrè, Emilio G., 186, 250 183, 213, 241 and longitude, 210 Tradescant, John, 188
Seismic waves, 178, 200 cepheid variable, 176 parallax, 155, 169 Tragus, Hieronymus see Bock,
primary and secondary, 182 color, 171, 183, 241 prominences, 173 Jerome
travel timetables, 201 dark, 152 surface, 173 Train, Russell E., 216
velocity of, 208 evolution, 171, 172, 185 see also Solar Travers, Morris, 252, 254
Seismograph, 193, 199, 213 gravitational pressures, 162 Supernovae, 150 Trees, dendrochronology, 161
Seismology, 168, 180 Hertzsprung-Russell diagram, of 1604, 174–175 Triassic period, 148, 198, 214,
term coined, 198 241 Swaminathan, M.S., 217 223
see also Earthquakes identifying and classifying, Syncline fold, 227 Tropical agriculture, 189–190
Seismometer, 213 150 Systematics, 177 Tropical climate zone, 230
Selborne, 190 life cycle, 247 Tacke, Ida, 253, 254 Tropical forests, 218, 219
Semper, Karl G., 209 mass and luminosity, 162 Tansley, Sir Arthur G., 187, conservation, 217
Sextant, 197, 213 measuring distance from 208 ecology, 217, 218
Shapley, Harlow, 186 Earth, 176 Taxonomy, 150, 155 Tropical habitat destruction, 218
Shasta daisy, 154 nuclear fuel of, 156 Tear fault, 227 Tropical Studies, Organization
Shin Shen, 192 radial motion of, 173 Tectonic plates, 164, 189, 201, for, 217
Sikkeland, Torbjørn, 252 radio, 150 202, 226 Tropism, 175
Silovski, Konstantin, 200 red giants, 247 see also Continental drift Troposphere, 200, 214
Silurian period, 151, 181, 198, stellar explosion, 204 Teisserenc de Bort, Léon- Tschermak–Seysenegg, Erich
213, 223 temperature of, 183, 241 Philippe, 200, 213, 214 (Erich Tschermak von
Slavery, 148 twin, 171, 185 Telescope, 183, 213, 214 Seysenegg), 188
Smith, Robert L., 210 Tycho’s, 154 radio, 212 Tsunami, of December 2004,
Smith, William, 186, 197, 209 variable, 213 reflecting, 171, 181–182, 204
Smog, 216 X-ray, 214 195, 213 Tswett, Mikhail S., 188
Smoking, 217, 220 Static electricity, 162, 195 refracting, 165, 195 Tull, Jethro, 188
Sniadecki, Jedrzej, 253 Steel, 152 space, 172 Tungsheng Liu, 220
271
INDEX Tyndall – Zodiac signs
Tycho’s star, 154 Venus, 155, 192, 195 wastewater reclamation, White dwarf, 156, 214, 247
Tyle, Sir Martin, 212 data, 242–243 217 White, Gilbert F., 190, 217
Tyndall, John, 199 Vertebrates, 175 Water resources White, Robert M., 217
Ulugh Beg, 194 Vesuvius, 184, 193 alternative, 217 Wicky, Fritz, 212
Uniformitarianism, 173, 198, Vogel, Hermann, 206 management, 216 Wilson, Carroll L., 216
199, 214 Volcanic rocks, 186–187 Watt, James, 155 Wilson, Edward O., 216
United Nations Environment Volcanoes, 162 Weather, Coriolis effect, 158 Wilson, Robert, 166
Programme, 216 Vesuvius, 184, 193 Weather forecasting, 148, 200 Winds
Universe, 176, 194 world distribution, 229 Weathering, 168 Beaufort scale, 150, 197,
age, 150 Vollenweider, Richard, 217 Weather maps, 196, 214 206, 235
expanding, 172 Vries, Hugo M. de, 189 first, 177 circulation, 196
size, 150, 246 Wahl, Arthur, 253 first synoptic, 198 world systems, 231
see also Big bang theory Walker, Alan, 203 modern techniques, 199 Winkler, Clemens, 251
Uplift, 193 Wallace, Alfred R., 159–160, symbols, 233 Wollaston, William H., 253
Upper Cambrian system, 175– 189 Weather satellite, first launched, Wolman, Abel, 216
176 Wallace line, 189 202 Xenophanes, 190, 192
Uranus, 148, 152, 171, 175, 214 Walton, John, 252 Wegener, Alfred L., 162, 171– X-ray stars, 214
data, 242–243 Wasp, parasitic, 220 172, 173–174, 189, 200, 207 Yonge, Charles M., 190
Urbain, Georges, 188, 252 Wastewater reclamation, 217 Welcher of Malvern, 193, 210 Zenithal projection see
Utyonkov, Vladimir, 254 Water Went, Friedrich A.F.C., 189– Azimuthal projection
Van Allen belt, 189, 214 biological purification, 217 190 Zeta Leporis, 204
Van Allen, James A., 189, 214 degradation of streams, 218 Werner, Abraham G., 190, Zhang Heng, 193
Varmus, Harold, 152–153 groundwater treatment, 217 211 Zirkel, Ferdinand, 199
Varves, 166 movement after rainfall, 172 Wheeler, John A., 206 Zodiacal light, 155
Vauquelin, Louis-N., 250, 251 pollution control, 217 Whewell, William, 190 Zodiac signs, 192
272