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LANDFORMS COURSE MATRIX
SYNOPSIS
SCIENCE CONTENT
THINKING PROCESSES

1.
SCHOOLYARD MODELS
Working in pairs, students create models of their school site, using a sand mixture and plastic cubes. They transfer the model to a plastic grid and draw a map on paper from the overlay. They observe and compare features on the models and corresponding maps. • Models represent objects that are very large or processes that occur over long periods of time.
• Models and maps are ways of representing landforms and human structures.
• Maps can be made from models.
• Observe the schoolyard area and create a model of it.
• Make a representation of the schoolyard using a grid system to transfer information to a smaller map.
• Compare features on the models and the corresponding maps.

2.
STREAM TABLES
Students set up stream tables with earth material and run water through the system. They observe the processes of erosion and deposition and become familiar with the landforms created. • Water is an important agent in shaping landforms.
• The wearing away of earth is erosion; the settling of eroded material is deposition.
• Landforms that result from running water include canyons, deltas, and alluvial fans.
• Observe and measure the effects of flowing water in the stream table.
• Compare the features created in the stream tables.
• Communicate the results of the
investigations.
• Relate the processes in the stream table to the processes of erosion and deposition.

3.
GO WITH THE FLOW
Students continue their stream-table investigations, studying variables that affect erosion and deposition—slope of the land and the rate of flow. They design further investigations, recording events and mapping the results. • The slope of the land over which a river flows affects the processes of erosion and deposition.
• During flooding, the rate of erosion and deposition increases.
• Humans affect the processes of erosion and deposition.
• Observe and measure the results of stream-table investigations.
• Experiment to find the effect of slope and floods on erosion and deposition.
• Communicate the results of experiments in a conference.
• Relate the stream-table results to natural processes.

4.
BUILD A MOUNTAIN
Students are introduced to the study of topography by building a model of a landform—a mountain. They use the foam model of Mt. Shasta to create a topographic map, and the map to produce a profile of the mountain. • Topographic maps are two-dimensional representations of three-dimensional surfaces.
• Topographic maps show contour lines, which represent points of equal elevation.
• Topographic maps use symbols and color to represent landforms.
• Observe features on a foam mountain and compare them to a two-dimensional
representation, a topographic map.
• Organize information from a model to create a topographic map and profile of a mountain.
• Relate topographic features to symbolic representations on maps.

5.
BIRD'S EYE VIEW
Students learn to read USGS topographic maps and compare them to aerial photographs. They study Death Valley, Mt. Shasta, and Grand Canyon maps and photographs, and make landform maps from the aerial photographs. • Cartographers use aerial photographs as one tool in constructing topographic maps.
• Landform maps can be generated from aerial photographs.
• Observe and describe the types of information represented on a topographic map.
• Compare the Mt. Shasta foam mountain to the topographic map.
• Interpret aerial photographs.
• Relate information on maps and aerial photographs to the actual landforms.
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