EARTH, in Geology and Astronomy

in geology and astronomy, fifth largest planet of the solar system and the only planet definitely known to support life. Gravitational forces have molded the earth, like all celestial bodies, into a spherical shape. However, the earth is not an exact sphere, being slightly flattened at the poles and bulging at the equator. The equatorial diameter is c.7,926 mi (12,760 km) and the polar diameter 7,900 mi (12,720 km); the circumference at the equator is c.24,830 mi (40,000 km). The surface of the earth is divided into dry land and oceans, the dry land occupying c.57.5 million sq mi (148.9 million sq km), and the oceans c.139.5 million sq mi (361.3 million sq km). The earth is surrounded by an envelope of gases called the atmosphere, of which the greater part is nitrogen and oxygen.

The Geologic Earth

Knowledge of the earth's interior has been gathered by three methods: by the analysis of earthquake waves passing through the earth (see seismology), by analogy with the composition of meteorites, and by consideration of the earth's size, shape, and density. Research by these methods indicates that the earth has a zoned interior, consisting of concentric shells differing from one another by size, chemical makeup, and density. The earth is undoubtedly much denser near the center than it is at the surface, because the average density of rocks near the surface is c.2.8 g/cc, while the average density of the entire earth is c.5.5 g/cc.

The Earth's Crust and the Moho

The outer shell, or crust, varies from 5 to 25 mi (8 to 40 km) in thickness, and consists of the continents and ocean basins at the surface. The continents are composed of rock types collectively called sial, a classification based on their densities and composition. Beneath the ocean basins and the sial of continents lie denser rock types called sima. The sial and sima together form the crust, beneath which lies a shell called the mantle. The boundary between the crust and the mantle is marked by a sharp alteration in the velocity of earthquake waves passing through that region. This boundary layer is called the Mohorovičić discontinuity, or Moho.

The Earth's Mantle

Extending to a depth of c.1,800 mi (2,900 km), the mantle probably consists of very dense (average c.3.9) rock rich in iron and magnesium minerals. Although temperatures increase with depth, the melting point of the rock is not reached because the melting temperature is raised by the great confining pressure. At depths between c.60 mi and c.125 mi (100 and 200 km) in the mantle, a plastic zone, called the asthenosphere, is found to occur. Presumably the rocks in this region are very close to melting, and the zone represents a fundamental boundary between the moving crustal plates of the earth's surface and the interior regions. The molten magma that intrudes upward into crustal rocks or issues from a volcano in the form of lava may owe its origin to radioactive heating or to the relief of pressure in the lower crust and upper mantle caused by earthquake faulting of the overlying crustal rock. Similarly, it is thought that the heat energy released in the upper part of the mantle has broken the earth's crust into vast plates that slide around on the plastic zone, setting up stresses along the plate margins that result in the formation of folds and faults (see plate tectonics).

The Earth's Core

Thought to be composed of iron and nickel, the dense (c.11.0) core of the earth lies below the mantle. The abrupt disappearance of direct compressional earthquake waves, which cannot travel through liquids, at depths below c.1,800 mi (2,900 km) indicates that the outer 1,380 mi (2,200 km) of the core are molten. It is thought, however, that the inner 780 mi (1,260 km) of the core are solid. The outer core is thought to be the source of the earth's magnetic field: In the "dynamo theory" advanced by W. M. Elasser and E. Bullard, tidal energy or heat is converted to mechanical energy in the form of currents in the liquid core; this mechanical energy is then converted to electromagnetic energy, which we see as the magnetic field. The magnetic field undergoes periodic reversals of its polarity on a timescale that ranges from a few thousand years to 35 million years. The last reversal occurred some 780,000 years ago.

The Astronomical Earth

The earth is the third planet in order from the sun, only Mercury and Venus being nearer; the mean distance from the earth to the sun is c.93 million mi (150 million km).

Rotation and Revolution

The earth rotates from west to east about a line (its axis) that is perpendicular to the plane of the equator and passes through the center of the earth, terminating at the north and south geographical poles. The period of one complete rotation is a day; the rotation of the earth is responsible for the alternate periods of light and darkness (day and night). The earth revolves about the sun once in a period of a little more than 365 1 / 4 days (a year). The path of this revolution, the earth's orbit, is an ellipse rather than a circle, and the earth is consequently nearer to the sun in January than it is in July; the difference between its maximum and minimum distances from the sun is c.3 million mi (4.8 million km). This difference is not great enough to affect climate on the earth.

The Change in Seasons

The change in seasons is caused by the tilt of the earth's axis to the plane of its orbit, making an angle of c.66.5°. When the northern end of the earth's axis is tilted toward the sun, the most direct rays of sunlight fall in the Northern Hemisphere. This causes its summer season. At the same time the Southern Hemisphere experiences winter since it is then receiving indirect rays. Halfway between, in spring and in autumn, there is a time (see equinox) when all parts of the earth have equal day and night. When the northern end of the earth's axis is tilted away from the sun, the least direct sunlight falls on the Northern Hemisphere. This causes its winter season.

The Origin of the Earth

The earth is estimated to be 4.5 billion to 5 billion years old, based on radioactive dating of lunar rocks and meteorites, which are thought to have formed at the same time. The origin of the earth continues to be controversial. Among the theories as to its origin, the most prominent are gravitational condensation hypotheses, which suggest that the entire solar system was formed at one time in a single series of processes resulting in the accumulation of diffuse interstellar gases and dust into a solar system of discrete bodies. Older and now generally discredited theories invoked extraordinary events, such as the gravitational disruption of a star passing close to the sun or the explosion of a companion star to the sun.

Bibliography

See R. F. Flint, The Earth and Its History (1973); H. Jeffreys, The Earth (6th ed. 1976); F. Delobeau, The Environment of the Earth (1976); W. R. Brown and N. D. Anderson, Earth Science (rev. ed. 1977); D. Attenborough, The Living Planet (1985).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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...Treatise on Astronomy , p. 314. In the fourth...heavens and the earth when they...to teach astronomy or geology, nor to...fundamental truth in all theology...heaven and the earth." istence...the eras of geology, and the...terminus. In the beginning...down the earth to a fluid...
...EARTH DOWN TO EARTH AN INTRODUCTION TO GEOLOGY BY CAREY...possible in the fields...physics, astronomy, biology...history of the earth and its inhabitants...foundations of astronomy, mathematics...and biology, geology comprises in its superstructure...
...Father Space, Time, and Astronomy in Navajo Sandpainting -ii- Earth Is My Mother, Sky Is My Father...Griffin-Pierce, Trudy. 1949- Earth is my mother, sky is my father: space, time, and astronomy in Navajo sandpainting Trudy...
...treatise, in addition...repeat it: geology is a historical...history of the earth is a most...contact with Astronomy, particularly...revolves once in every 200...coincidences between astronomy and geology are truly...age of the earth. may add...Physical Geology Nelson...published in Trans...age of the earth" Nature...JEANS, J. Astronomy and Cosmogony...
...essential to his concept of the Earth in space), and show just how original...focuses on Hookes contributions to geology, should be but one volume in a series...volumes should cover Hookes work in astronomy, meteorology, physics, chemistry...
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...14, no. 2 ( 1994 ), p. 326. In another context, however, Nisbet...first principles. The Young Earth: An Introduction to Archaean Geology , London 1987 , pp. 3-6...feet (see chapter four). and astronomy. After 1960, to be sure, some...
...peacefully. Patriarchs of astronomy Nikolaus Copernicus...success of mechanics in both the heavenly...of planets) and on Earth (liberating humans...appears to depict the Earth in organic terms, "geophysiology...scientific models of the Earth, in a manner consistent...
...light toward the earth, "all the celestial...object is seen in its true position...that characterize astronomy. Behind this statement...in contemporary geology and biology. One...Urania, the muse of Astronomy, and include the...represent grief in celestial terms...possessed the earth" (Sec. 30), eclipsing...
...understanding the geology, geophysics, geography...implies that it is in the same league as Earth (which is 500 times...of this is good for astronomy. On the brighter side...types of planets: the Earth-like rocky planets in the inner solar system...
...focus on the sun/Earth relationship...of new stars in our galaxy...environment, planetary geology, gravity, time...basic radio astronomy, procedures...selection of lessons in the areas of...science, or earth and space science...astronomy, radar astronomy, and communication...dish, 34 meters in diameter, that...
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...Charles Darwins insights as well as findings in geology had shown that the Earth must have been in existence -- and warmed by the Sun -- for billions...switched again, which led to her reading up on astronomy, and when Payne started anything, the effects...
...From astronomy and military...journey from Earth, NASAs NEAR...about its geology and even...monitor it in regular scientific...telescopes in ground observatories...reaching Earth is absorbed...branch of astronomy-- infrared...returning to Earth. Helen...forgetting I was in a rush to...has been on astronomy. In 1953...
...educational and documentary films on geology, astronomy, and space exploration, and he has contributed numerous articles on geology and Earth science to magazines, as well as chapters in textbooks. This article draws from his...
...present cultural context. They represent expressions of a worldview that is waning though still much at hand. Developments in geology, biology, physics, and cosmology beginning in the late eighteenth century and continuing today are bringing about the...
...languidly, against one another in a sealed bud. However, with...stunning points and inner nubs of earth--so with such ministrations...arousal of a woman is suggested in terms both hyperbolic and understated...season caused by the orbit of the Earth around the Sun: "as the sun...
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...the fields of astronomy, geology, botany, physics...recognition in Britain, America...giants of the Earth and one of...married lover in Yaroslavl. He returned to astronomy, but it is...published papers on astronomy from his refugee camp in Germany, says...
...warned that a similar disaster would be along in a few years. Forget geology, astronomy or any other scientific discipline. He based his...calendar ... just December 23, 2012. Thats when the Earth will move. Or at least thats what Hancock thought...
...school auditorium. In conjunction with the geology, astronomy and meteorology subjects...studying, eighth- grade earth science students will...throughout the schools in Dundee Township-based...one of the 20 schools in District 300 are scheduled...
...Caves to Comets" and focuses on earth and planetary sciences. Graydon...program "to get girls interested in science." "I hope they go into careers in science, such as geology," Mrs. Moss said. "I wish I...paleontology, gemology, geography, astronomy and science illustration...
...Sarmast, will provoke violent reactions among earth-scientists, who have always taken it for...when the Atlantic broke through a gap in a land mass and mountain range running...informed guess based upon the fact that in geology, most changes take a million years or so...
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encyclopedia articles on: Earth in Geology and Astronomy  - 5 results

 
 
EARTH , in geology and astronomy in geology and astronomy, 3rd planet of the solar...Gravitational forces have molded the earth, like all celestial bodies...to affect climate on the earth. The Change in Seasons The change in...
...physics, astronomy, and mathematics...Branches of Geology Geology...composition of earth materials...materials in response...erosion and, in turn, by...Evolution of Geology Early...Observations on earth structure...most recent in the program...Physical Geology (3d ed...et al., Earth Materials...
HORIZON in astronomy, roughly circular line bounding...view of the surface of the earth where the sky and earth seem...horizon , the principal axis in the altazimuth coordinate...zenith and nadir . In geology horizon refers to sedimentary...
...chemistry , and astronomy ; the earth sciences (sometimes...sciences) include geology , paleontology...nuclear physics. In addition to...application in astronomy was the spectroscope...Birth of Modern Geology Modern geology...had shaped the earth were still in...
...disciplines such as astronomy, geology, physics, chemistry...distribution of matter in planetary systems...initially focused on the earth and moon. It was extended...satellites with advances in astronomy, and increased in significance as the...


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