Thursday, April 29, 2010
Sunday, April 25, 2010
why are these craters harder to spot on earth compared to the moon??
You see few craters on the Earth. Between the fact that 75% of the Earth is covered with water, and wind, rain, earthquakes, landslides. volcanoes and continental drift, the Earth's surface changes fairly quickly. From a geologic perspective, of course. The Moon's surface is dead. There are no volcanoes, no major moonquakes, no oceans. No weather; no rain, no wind. When a meteoroid strikes the Moon, it leaves a crater - and the ONLY way that crater gets disturbed is by another crater. You can bet that for every crater you can see on the Moon, there once were equivalent impacts on the Earth. But the Moon's craters are forever. The Earth is always rebuilding itself.
my self managent goal and contributor goal !!!!!!!!
my self managent goal is........ to get my homework done in time,to get my work done,to not get distracted
my contributor goal is......... to work with others,work hard,be helpfull,be creative
my contributor goal is......... to work with others,work hard,be helpfull,be creative
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
Landforms
Landforms
Room 1 has been learning about landforms. Room 1 has been working really hard and have been geting all there work done and here are some questions I had written:
Room 1 has been learning about landforms. Room 1 has been working really hard and have been geting all there work done and here are some questions I had written:
- what is a mantle?
- how do volcanos form?
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