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938135
Changes in the Earth and its Atmosphere - C1
Description
GCSE Chemistry (C1) Mind Map on Changes in the Earth and its Atmosphere - C1, created by Georgia Freeman on 27/05/2014.
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chemistry
c1
earth
atmosphere
aqa
gcse
gcse chemistry
chemistry
c1
gcse
Mind Map by
Georgia Freeman
, updated more than 1 year ago
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Georgia Freeman
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Resource summary
Changes in the Earth and its Atmosphere - C1
The Earth has a LAYERED STRUCTURE consisting of the CRUST, the MANTLE and a CORE.
CRUST (and upper part of the mantle)
cracked into a number of large pieces
TECTONIC PLATES
surrounded by the ATMOSPHERE
The surface of the Earth and its atmosphere have changed since the Earth was formed and are still changing
The Earth and its atmosphere provide everything we need
human activites = further changes in the atmosphere
The atmosphere has been much the same for the last 200 MILLION YEARS
provides the conditions needed to live life on Earth
the proportions of gases are the same as they were then now
4/5 (80%) NITROGEN
1/5 (20%) OXYGEN
other small proportions of various gases
e.g. carbon dioxide, water vapour and noble gases
CONVECTION CURRENTS
in the Earth's mantle - driven by heat released by natural radioactive processes
causes the plates to move at relative speeds of a few cm per year
movement can be SUDDEN and DISASTROUS
EARTHQUAKES
VOLCANIC ERUPTIONS
occur at the boundaries between the tectonic plates
Theories as to how the atmosphere was formed
several theories
during this period, the Earth's Atmosphere was mainly carbon dioxide and there would've been little or no oxygen gas
(like the atmospheres of Mars and Venus today)
there may also have been water vapour and some methane and ammonia present
during the 1st billion years of Earth's existence there was INTENSE VOLCANIC ACTIVITY
this released the gases that formed the early atmosphere and water vapour which condensed to form oceans
LIFE ON EARTH
Many theories on how life was produced billions of years ago.
OCEANS
acts as a reservoir for carbon dioxide
increased amounts of carbon dioxide absorbed by the oceans has an impact on the marine environment
due to an increase in ACIDITY
Plants produced the oxygen that is now in the atmosphere
methane and ammonia burnt in this ocean producing more water, carbon dioxide and nitrogen
most of the carbon from the carbon dioxide in the air gradually became locked up in SEDIMENTARY ROCKS as CARBONATES and FOSSIL FUELS
BURNING FOSSIL FUELS
nowadays, the release of CO2 by burning fossil fuels increases the level of CO2 in the atmosphere
THE GASES IN AIR
air - a mixture of gases with different boiling points
can be fractionally distilled to provide a source of raw materials used in a variety of industrial processes
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