BHS Secondary Science
Mountain Building
Earth Science
Quarter 3
McGraw Hill Module 16
RESOURCES
PACING
● Module Launch: 45 min ● Lesson 1: 90 min ● Lesson 2: 90 min ● Lesson 3: 90 min ● Module Wrap-Up: 45 min
Module 16: Mountain Building ● How do mountains grow so large? ● Lesson 1: Crust-Mantle Relationships ● Lesson 2: Orogeny ● Lesson 3: Other Types of Mountain Building
STANDARD
LEARNING PROGRESSIONS
ESS.2.4 Develop and use a model to illustrate how Earth’s internal and surface processes operate at different spatial and temporal scales . Emphasize how the appearance of land and seafloor features are a result of both constructive forces and destructive mechanisms. Examples of constructive forces could include tectonic uplift or mountain building. Examples of destructive mechanisms could include weathering or mass wasting. (ESS2.B)
● I am designing,
modifying, and using a model to help explain my understanding of the constructive and destructive processes that shape the Earth’s surface ● Explain a process or phenomena ● Identify a pattern ● Interpret a pattern’s meaning ● Model the forces shaping Earth’s surface ● Model cause and effect
CONCEPTS (Nouns)
SKILLS (Verbs)
● Plate Tectonics ● Mountain Ranges ● Mid-Ocean Ridges ● Magnetic Polarity ● Hot Spots ● Constructive Forces ● Destructive Forces
VOCABULARY
● Topography ● Compressive Force ● Uplifted Mountains
● Isostasy ● Orogeny ● Plateau
● Root ● Isostatic rebound ● Fault block mountain
RECOMMENDED INSPIRE RESOURCES
PAGE MATERIALS NEEDED TIME
● CER
Phenomena Introduction
Launch Lab: How does crust displace the mantle?
421
20 min
worksheet
CER
267
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