Title: Chapter 7 The Terrestrial Worlds
1Chapter 7The Terrestrial Worlds
2Mercurycraterssmooth plainscliffs
3Mooncraterssmooth plains
4Venusvolcanoesfew craters
Radar view of a twin-peaked volcano
5Earthvolcanoescratersmountainsriverbeds
6Marssome cratersvolcanoesancient riverbeds
7Terrestrial Planet Interiors
8Lithosphere
- A planets outer layer of cool, rigid rock is
called the lithosphere. - It floats on the warmer, softer rock that lies
beneath.
9How Did They Get This Way?Differentiation
- Gravity pulls high-density material to center
- Lower-density material rises to surface
- Material ends up separated by density
10Sources of Internal Heat
- Gravitational potential energy of accreting
planetesimals - Differentiation
- Radioactivity
11Cooling of Interior
- Convection transports heat as hot material rises
and cool material falls - Conduction transfers heat from hot material to
cool material - Radiation sends energy into space
12Tectonics
13Seafloor Recycling
14Continental Motion
15Types of Lava and Volcanoes
Runny lava makes flat lava plains.
Slightly thicker lava makes broad shield
volcanoes.
Thickest lava makes steep stratovolcanoes.
16Moon
- Volcanoes flooded lunar craters
- lunar maria
17Same thing on Mercury
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19Water on Mars
20Storms on Mars
21Low-lying regions may once have had oceans.
22Today, most water lies frozen underground (blue
regions) Recent gulley formation?
23Erosion on Venus
- Photos of rocks taken by lander show little
erosion
24Tectonics on Mercury
- Long cliffs indicate that Mercury shrank early in
its history.
25The Greenhouse Effect
Which Molecules are Greenhouse Gases?
26Runaway Greenhouse Effect
More evaporation, stronger greenhouse effect
Greater heat, more evaporation