Difference between revisions of "Pages 56-67"

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Return to [[History 8 Environment Bone From a Dry Sea]]
 
Return to [[History 8 Environment Bone From a Dry Sea]]
  
8. Place changes
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Place change is the evolution of an area. Place change is conveyed in the book ''Bone From a Dry Sea'' when Vinny climbs a hill staring at the dry desert, "Looking back over the gray, roasting desert she tried to imagine it when it had been a marshy lake, streaming under this sun, with rivers running in and pigs rooting in the reed beds, and other creatures, creatures who were almost people, perhaps, making their camp at the water's edge ..." (56). This is an example of place change. It was once a lake, filled with water and animals and has evolved into a dry, sandy desert with nearly no water.
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The Law of Superposition, created by Charles Lyell, states that there are layers of the Earth. Youngest at the top and oldest at the bottom, much like a cake the cake is made, icing is put on, then the decorations or candles are placed on top. Superposition is portrayed when Dr. Hamiska pointed out the layering in the rocks. "You see this layering, how it's tiled? The gray band? That's tuff- remeber? ... If it turns up elsewhere in the area I shall know where it comes in the sequence. Now I'm going to see if I can hack out some good unweathered crystal from the tuff" (56). Dr. Hamiska points out the layering of the Earth to Vinny showing her the old and new layers.
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http://academic.brooklyn.cuny.edu/geology/leveson/core/topics/time/froshlec8.html
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Sources: Origins Manual page 21
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picture of superposition: https://www.studyblue.com/notes/note/n/anthr-202-study-guide-2013-14-graf/deck/8694151
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- Sara Doyle
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A Bone from a Dry Sea by Peter Dickinson page 56
  
9. Superposition
 
  
 
10. Fossilization
 
10. Fossilization

Revision as of 14:03, 20 September 2015

Return to History 8 Environment Bone From a Dry Sea

Place change is the evolution of an area. Place change is conveyed in the book Bone From a Dry Sea when Vinny climbs a hill staring at the dry desert, "Looking back over the gray, roasting desert she tried to imagine it when it had been a marshy lake, streaming under this sun, with rivers running in and pigs rooting in the reed beds, and other creatures, creatures who were almost people, perhaps, making their camp at the water's edge ..." (56). This is an example of place change. It was once a lake, filled with water and animals and has evolved into a dry, sandy desert with nearly no water. The Law of Superposition, created by Charles Lyell, states that there are layers of the Earth. Youngest at the top and oldest at the bottom, much like a cake the cake is made, icing is put on, then the decorations or candles are placed on top. Superposition is portrayed when Dr. Hamiska pointed out the layering in the rocks. "You see this layering, how it's tiled? The gray band? That's tuff- remeber? ... If it turns up elsewhere in the area I shall know where it comes in the sequence. Now I'm going to see if I can hack out some good unweathered crystal from the tuff" (56). Dr. Hamiska points out the layering of the Earth to Vinny showing her the old and new layers.


http://academic.brooklyn.cuny.edu/geology/leveson/core/topics/time/froshlec8.html Sources: Origins Manual page 21 picture of superposition: https://www.studyblue.com/notes/note/n/anthr-202-study-guide-2013-14-graf/deck/8694151


- Sara Doyle A Bone from a Dry Sea by Peter Dickinson page 56


10. Fossilization

11. Define tuff

12. Archaeological process