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EARTH HISTORY COURSE MATRIX
SYNOPSIS
SCIENCE CONCEPTS
PROCESSES

5.
Limestone (4–5 sessions)
Students observe limestone and create calcium carbonate by blowing into limewater. They observe fossils from the Grand Canyon and use this information to interpret the sequence of environments that existed in that region in the past. • Limestone is a sedimentary rock composed mainly of calcium carbonate; it is formed by physical and biological processes.
• Prehistoric environments can be inferred from evidence gathered from rocks and fossils.
• Identify sediments in limestone.
• Investigate how carbon dioxide contributes to the precipitation of calcium carbonate in water.
• Model the formation of limestone layers in an ancient environment.

6.
It’s About Time (5–6 sessions)
Students construct personal time lines to record their own history. They expand their understanding of time lines to construct geological time lines and begin to grapple with the large numbers that represent geographical time. • Geological time extends from Earth’s origin to the beginning of human history.
• Earth’s history is measured in millions of years.
• Create a personal time line from birth to the present.
• Construct a time line of geological events and prehistoric life.
• Apply the concept of time line to Earth history.
• Determine the relative age of rocks, based on association with other rocks.

7.
Fossils and Time (2–3 sessions)
Students become familiar with how the fossil record contributes evidence to the reconstruction of Earth’s past environments. They use index fossils to put layers of rocks from three locations on the Colorado Plateau into relative-age sequence. Students sequence 30 major events in the history of Earth (geological and biological). • Index fossils can be used as indicators for the age of a sedimentary rock layer and for correlating rock layers.
• Fossil evidence supports the law of fossil succession: organisms found as fossils change over geological time.
• Use index fossils to correlate rock layers in three locations on the Colorado Plateau.
• Compare various events and fossils to derive a faunal succession over geological time.
• Make inferences from fossil evidence that contribute to an understanding of fossil succession.

8.
One Rock to Another (4–8 sessions)
Students become familiar with igneous and metamorphic rocks and the processes that create them. They draw on their experiences with all rock types to build a concept of the rock cycle driven by constructive and destructive forces on Earth. They conduct an investigation into crystal formation in igneous rock, using salol crystals. They revisit local rocks and conduct projects based on local geology. • Igneous rocks form from molten rock and can be described as extrusive or intrusive.
• Metamorphic rocks form when heat and pressure change existing rocks.
• Igneous, metamorphic, and sedimentary rocks can change from one to another over time.
• Observe and compare the properties of sedimentary, igneous, and metamorphic rocks.
• Relate the formation processes of the three types of rocks to develop the rock cycle.
• Relate the size of crystals in igneous rocks to environmental variables.
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