TRIMESTER
TWO: Earth
Science
Waves,
wind, water, and ice shape and reshape Earth's land surface. As a basis
for understanding this concept:
- Students
know some changes in the earth are due to slow processes, such as erosion,
and some changes are due to rapid processes, such as landslides, volcanic
eruptions, and earthquakes.
- Students
know natural processes, including freezing and thawing and the growth
of roots, cause rocks to break down into smaller pieces.
- Students
know moving water erodes landforms, reshaping the land by taking it
away from some places and depositing it as pebbles, sand, silt, and
mud in other places (weathering, transport, and deposition).
Volcanoes
Earthquakes
Soil 
Erosion
The
properties of rocks and minerals reflect the processes that formed them.
As a basis for understanding this concept:
- Students
know how to differentiate among igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic
rocks by referring to their properties and methods of formation (the
rock cycle).
- Students
know how to identify common rock-forming minerals (including quartz,
calcite, feldspar, mica, and hornblende) and ore minerals by using a
table of diagnostic properties (Moh's Scale).
Rocks

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