Title: Bellwork: August 28th Write Agree or Disagree.
1Bellwork August 28th Write Agree or Disagree.
- A rotation of the Earth takes one year.
- One year is 356 days.
- One spin on the Earths axis takes 24 hours.
- Currently, it is winter in Australia.
- In areas near the equator, it is always warm.
2Notes from Ch. 2 section 1
- Turn to page 26.
- The earth spins on its axis, which is a imaginary
rod going through the North and South poles. - One rotation 24 hours. (gives us day and
night.) see next slide
3NIGHTFALL IN BRAZIL
Brazilian Continental Platform.
Atlantic Ocean
Belo Horizonte
Salvador
Rio de Janeiro
Grande São Paulo
4NIGHTFALL IN USA
5Still daylight in California.
Chicago
The biggest concentration of lights (from top to
bottom) are the cities of Boston, New York,
Philadelphia and Washington.
Dallas
Puerto Rico
Miami
Houston
6Revolution
- Revolution 1 year
- 365 ¼ days
- 1 complete orbit
- See picture on page 28.
7Earths tilt
- Earth is tilted at an angle of 23.5 degrees
- We have seasons because the earth is tilted!
- It is summer in the hemisphere tilted toward the
sun.
8Revolution
9A Tilted Earth
- We have seasons because the earth is tilted.
- The seasons are opposite in the Northern and
Southern Hemispheres. - Areas around the Equator experience warmth all
year round. They do not experience seasonal
changes. - The farther away a place is from the equator,
the colder its climate.
10Illustrate one complete orbit
- Illustrate a complete orbit (like page 28 and the
one shown) on the bottom half of page 3 in your
Burrito Book.
11Equinoxes and Solstices
- The longest day of the year is the first day of
summer called the Summer Solstice. (June 21st) - The shortest day of the year is the first day of
winter called the Winter solstice (Dec. 21st) - The first day of Spring and the first day of
Autumn experience equal hours of daylight and
darkness. (Example sun rises at 6am and sets at
6pm) These are called the Spring Equinox (March
21st) and Fall Equinox (Sept. 22nd ).
12Spring Equinox (Vernal Equinox) 1st day of Spring March 21st Days and nights of equal length
Summer Solstice 1st day of summer June 21st Longest day /shortest night
Fall Equinox (Autumnal Equinox) 1st day of Fall September 22nd Days and nights of equal length
Winter Solstice 1st day of winter December 21st Shortest day/longest night
13Tropics
- Between the Tropic of Cancer (23 ½ N) and the
Tropic of Capricorn (23 ½ S) lies the tropics. - Because they surround the equator, it is always
warm. - Since they dont have temperature changes for
seasons, they have a wet and dry season. - Seasonal winds called monsoons bring in heavy
rains.
14Polar regions
- The polar regions are near the poles.
- From the Arctic Circle and above and from the
Antarctic Circle and below these are the polar
regions. - The climate in these regions is always cold!!
15North Pole 90N
Polar region
Arctic Circle 66 ½ N
These regions experience 4 seasons.
Tropic of Cancer 23 ½ N
tropics
Equator 0
Tropic of Capricorn 23 ½ S
These regions experience 4 seasons.
Polar region
Antarctic Circle 66 ½ S
South Pole 90S
16Chapter 22 Water on Earth
- Freshwater water without salt
- Glacier large areas of slow moving ice
- Precipitation water that falls to the earth as
rain, snow, sleet, or hail
17Meteorology
18Human Geography
19Meridians
20Equator
21parallels
22Physical Geography
23(No Transcript)
24Asia
25Australia
26Tropic of Cancer