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2nd quarter

in
Earth Science
Ms. Glee Anne G. Delgado
Congratulations!
For enduring the first quarter. I know that you we’re
exhausted, and loaded of tons of schoolwork's, but still,
you did it!
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2nd Quarter Lessons
1. Energy Resources
2. Water and Soil Resources
3. Exogenic Processes
4. Endogenic Processes
5. Deformation of the Earth’s crust
6. Plate Tectonics
7. History of the Earth’s Major event in the Earths Past
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Renewable or Non- Renewable?

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What is an Energy?

Energy is the ability to move.


Energy can also change matter
from one state to another (for
example, from solid to liquid).
Every living thing needs
energy to live and grow.

Where do you consume most


of your energy?

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ENERGY is the basic need of living things and life
cannot exist without energy.
In what way? Can you cite an example?

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Renewable
energy

Non-Renewable
energy

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Renewable energy
Often referred to as clean energy,
comes from natural sources or
processes that are constantly
replenished.
Can be reused or recycled and used
multiple times.
Can be replaced in a short amount of
time .
Non- Renewable energy
Often referred to as dirty energy and
are only available in limited amounts
and take long time to replenish.
Cannot be reused or recycled.

Cannot be replaced or may take


millions of years to replace by
natural process.
Soil and Water
Resources
Soil and water are renewable resources but
may be ruined by careless human actions.

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Soil resources
Soil is a mixture of eroded rock, minerals,
partly decomposed organic matter, and
other materials

Although renewable, soil takes a very


long time to form—up to hundreds of
millions of years. So, for human
purposes, soil is a nonrenewable
resource.

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The Dust Bowl occurred between 1933 and 1939 in Oklahoma and
other southwestern U.S. states. Plowing had exposed prairie soil.
Drought turned the soil to dust. Intense dust storms blew away
vast quantities of the soil. Much of the soil blew all the way to the
Atlantic Ocean.
Water resources
Water is essential for all life on Earth. For
human use, water must be fresh. 

Although water is constantly recycled


through the water cycle, it is in danger.
Over-use and pollution of freshwater
threaten the limited supply that people
depend on.

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Water resources
Water pollution is the release of
substances into bodies of water that
makes water unsafe for human use and
disrupts aquatic ecosystems. Water
pollution can be caused by a plethora of
different contaminants, including toxic
waste, petroleum, and disease-causing
microorganisms.

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Partners in hand, partners at hand.
Choose a partner, and work together
to create an infographic campaign:
1. Renewable Resources
2. Non-renewable Resources
3. Soil Resources FRIDAY
4. Water Resources
You can include, definition, uses &
importance, problem and solution.
2nd quarter
in
Earth Science
Ms. Glee Anne G. Delgado

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