How Did Eratosthenes Calculate the Circumference of the Earth?This essay will explain how Eratosthenes calculated the circumference of the Earth without leaving Egypt. Eratosthenes was born in approximately 276 B.C, and even though he was Greek, he lived his whole life in Egypt. Eratosthenes was known as a pentathlon, and ... Read More
The article about earthquakes that I chose is "Problems Persist at Fukushima," by Laurie Garret, written on February 20, 2014, on the website www.foreignpolicy.com. On March 11, 2011, a major plate that runs through Japan plunged more than 160 feet downwards toward the Japan Trench. This caused the fourth largest ... Read More
The Earth's Atmospheric and Surface Heat What a Treat! Worth a Tweet?Purpose The purpose of the lab is to discover, compare, and analyze various factors of Earth's temperature, including but not limited to the latitude (directly proportional to the amount of direct sunlight striking Earth's surface), proximity to the ocean ... Read More
MOUNT HIBOK-HIBOKMount Hibok-Hibok is a stratovolcano located on the northwestern end of Camuigin Island in our country, the Philippines. It is part of the Pacific Ring of Fire and is one of the most active volcanoes in our country. It has an elevation of 1,332 metres and a base diameter ... Read More
IntroductionMost earthquakes take place on earth as a result of movement of tectonic plates. Almost 7 percent are due to eruptions of volcanoes, and the remaining 3 percent are due to ground collapses and other causes (Stein Wysession, 2009). Therefore, earthquakes that occur among natural hazards, in particular earth geographic ... Read More
The Effect of Mt. St. Helens on its Surrounding areasThe year 1980 is one which the state of Washington will remember for quite a while. During the morning of May 18, the peak of Mt. St. Helens suddenly erupted into a ball of ash that would later cause devastating damage ... Read More
The question I asked for the science fair is What grows plants faster in store bought soil or soil from your own yard? My hypothesis is that plants will grow better in soil from your own yard. I chose this topic because it was simple but could help people discover ... Read More
Chapter 2Chapter two had been an idea originally created by Harry Hess, not exactly, but he had been on the right track. Hess had introduced the awareness of Sea Floor Spreading, which meant that the ocean floor had been moving old rock towards land. While this had been going on ... Read More
Volcanoes are everywhere, but you never give them much thought. Eruptions are constantly on the news and the internet, but the majority of us have never had a true understand or experience with them. They are one of the most disastrous natural occurrences on the planet, but through all the ... Read More
Plate Tectonics is defined as a theory of global tectonics in which the lithosphere is divided into a number of crustal plates, each of which moves on the plastic asthenosphere more or less independently to collide with, slide under, or move past adjacent plates, (Dictionary.com). The Theory of Plate Tectonics ... Read More
Something to do with BauxiteBauxite is a commonly used mineral that most do not think about. Bauxite is the mineral used to make the metal aluminum. It is found in topsoil regions around the rainforest and tropical areas. In the mining process it is very important that the miners be ... Read More
AbstractUniformitarianism is an integral concept in geology that lies down the framework for what geologists would study in numerous geoscience fields. Uniformitarianism is used to understand modern processes and extrapolate the past. When discussing uniformitarianism, a common thing for geologists to say is, The present is the key to the ... Read More
Applicability of Clays and Bentonite AbstractClay provides a broad spectrum of applicability in modern day industrial and geological usages, objects of clay decent can be tied to a large verity of products that are used on a day-to-day basis. Properties of these industrial minerals provide the clay with certain characteristics ... Read More
The Evolution of Plate Tectonics in Europe Plate tectonics is the theory that Earths strong outer layer, the lithosphere, is divided into several plates that glide over the mantle. Basically, scientists believe that convection, due to the heating of the magma in the mantle, is the driving force that pushes ... Read More
The volcanoes in Hawaii are formed on a chain of hotspots in the oceanknown as the Hawaiian Emperor Seamount chain. The hotspot locationclimaxes, resulting in a shield volcano, and then dies out, reappearing onthe trail of the chain, creating a new volcano. This is known as the platetectonics and hotspot ... Read More
Humans are curious by nature, and we want to know about the world around us. We learn about our world from studying Geology. Geology is the study of the Earth, to put it simply. Geologists study all of the processes that make the world work. They study the rocks and ... Read More
Should Glaciology Be Studied?Glaciers are made up of fallen snow, that, over many years, compresses into large, thickened ice masses. They form when snow remains in one location long enough to transform into ice. Glaciers occupy about ten percent of the world's total land area, with the most glaciers located ... Read More
IntroductionThe farm manager of the UNH Organic Dairy Farm (ODRF), Nicole Guindon, needs a further analysis of the soil samples collected around the farm in order to determine which land would be most suitable for pasture. The following analysis will tell us what we need to know about the relationships ... Read More
In Japan, earthquakes are common and treated like everyday occurrences. Kathryn Schultz mentions in her article The Really Big One that during a seismology conference in Japan an earthquake happened. It was the third one that week and the people attending the conference were prepared for it, treating it like ... Read More
Geologic Processes and Analyzation Provide Insight into Humanitys PastWithin the fields of Egyptology, Archaeology, Geology, and Astronomy there exists a great, highly contended and often heated debate about the time period in which the Great Pyramid of Giza and the Sphinx were built. This contested date, depending on the accuracy ... Read More
A Review of Lyells Principles of GeologyThe concept and structure of a scientific revolution is historically significant in terms of measuring and defining how ideas have changed through centuries. Like the subject of study in geologyrocks, mountains, and so onthe principles of that science were, for the most part, extensively ... Read More
A volcanic event occurs when there is a sudden or continuing release of energy caused by near-surface or surface magma movement. Seismic activity is defined as the types, frequency and size of earthquakes that happen over a period of time in a certain area. Plate tectonics is the theory that ... Read More
Introduction Strand Plains, and areas like them, have been subject of study in recent past years due to their ability to retain geomorphic structures from previous time periods, making them a beneficial study site. One such study on the subject, written by Tamura et. al, notes that, Beach deposits in ... Read More
Barrier islands play an influential role in the protection of land masses from forces such as flooding and storm surges. These islands are critical both to survival of various species and the thriving of environments formed in the inlets between the islands and the lands. It also protects civilization, allowing ... Read More
There several well-tested techniques of determining the ages of fossils and rocks that are utilized by a scientist. These methods include relative dating and radiometric dating. Relative dating is a technique where the layers of rock and fossils are positioned in order from the oldest to the youngest while radiometric ... Read More
Volcanic lightning is a phenomenon in which lightning is generated amid large volcanic eruptions, mostly deep seated within the ejected plume. The lightning is also mostly prominent during the beginning of an eruption. Not all volcanic eruptions produce lightning as it is mostly a rare occurrence in which the source ... Read More
The Illinois state is located in the central lowland province and is part of a vast Paleozoic depositional and structural basin known as the Illinois Basin. The Illinois Basin underlies most of the state of Illinois and extends into Indiana and Kentucky. The typical topography of Illinois includes flat planes ... Read More
The geological chronological term Anthropocene was first proposed by Nobel Laureate Paul J. Crutzen, in his article The Geology of Mankind in Nature. He points out that the planet has been, and will continue to be, profoundly affected by human beings (Crutzen 23). Once we accept the premise that we ... Read More
The geological chronological term Anthropocene was first proposed by Nobel Laureate Paul J. Crutzen, in his article The Geology of Mankind in Nature. He points out that the planet has been, and will continue to be, profoundly affected by human beings (Crutzen 23). Once we accept the premise that we ... Read More
Residing at the Burlington House in Piccadilly, London is one of the largest Earth Science fellowships in the world. The fellowship consists of over 9000 members of varied race and gender from different parts of the globe (Winchester, 224), and the building features many of the Geographical artifacts that are ... Read More