The Passage of Time
Teacher Activity Page
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[Student]
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[PDF File]
[Pre-Visit Activities]
Background
As the students view the majestic wonders of the Black
Canyon area, the painted walls and incredible depth of the
erosion that has occurred stand out dramatically. From the 2
billion year old Precambrian rock at the rivers edge to the
plateau that soars 2,200 feet above, one can see a living
geologic timeline.
The Geologic Time Scale activity engages students to
understand the changes in our earth over billions of years.
Although most of us understand that time is measured in
linear sequence, comprehending events that took millions of
years to happen or others that took place millions of years
in the past is difficult. In the following activity,
students will try three different exercises to help them
more clearly understand the time scale with which the Earth
measures its "life."
Resources/Materials/Supplies
Graph paper
Notebook paper
Pencils or thin magic markers
Internet access
Teacher Directed Activity 1
- What other objects or concepts can you name that
might help you imagine such numbers as 300 million years?
For example, how do the number of years from the creation
of the Pacific Island Arc to today compare to the number
of miles to the moon? To the first star? To the number of
dollars in the national debt?
Distribute the graph paper and pencils/markers. Direct
students to fold the paper lengthwise into 3 equal columns
and title, Personal Time Scale; title the left
column, Intervals; the middle column Millions
of Years Ago; the right column Events.
- Have them list on notebook paper at least 10-20
events in their lives, beginning with their birth and
ending with an event that occurred in the past 24
hours.
- Invite students to work on this together so that they
can prod each other's memories for events.
- Have them arrange their lists in sequence from most
recent to least recent.
- Instruct students to inscribe the events of their
lives in order from top to bottom in the right hand
column, beginning with the most recent event, ending with
birth. Explain that they have created a sequential
timeline exactly like that created by scientists to
chronicle the events of Earth's "life."
- Using their Personal Time Scales, they could
describe their growing up and may be able to identify
prerequisites to certain events. For example, "I learned
to ride my bike with training wheels before I learned to
ride without them."
- In the middle column, have students write the number
of years from the present that each event occurred. This
is the Numerical Time Column.
- Designate the present as zero in the column.
- Number events according to number of years back from
the time it occurred.
- The last number in the column would be the student's
age.
- Using these 2 sets of information together, students
could begin to determine the number of years it took them
to learn a new skill or at what (class average) age the
class learned to walk or recite the alphabet.
- Scientists divide Earth's timeline into specific
intervals, such as Jurassic or Precambrian. Use the
left-hand column to show students larger, descriptive
intervals for their own lives.
- Using the left-hand column, have students divide
their timelines into the following intervals:
Preschoolian, Gradeschoolian, Midschoolian.
- Can they think of natural divisions within these
larger groupings? For example, could the
Preschoolian age be further divided into Crawlian and
Walkian? Brainstorm a number of such possible divisions
with students and then have them complete their Personal
Time Scales.
- Color code intervals created in the first column
across the chart to show what events and numerical
designations belong in each major interval division.
Distribute copies of the Geologic Time Scale from one of
the attached Hot Links and
invite students to compare them to their Personal Time
Scales.
Have students use the geologic time scales to describe
events in Earth's "life" in the same way they described
events in their own lives.
What happened in the Precambrian interval of Earth's
life? How many years ago?
- At what point in the Geologic Time Scale did the
Black Canyon form?
- In what time interval did the first glacier bring a
halt to the chemical reaction that formed the copper
ore?
Teacher Directed Activity 2
You need a large measured space such as a football field,
basketball court. Students must be able to use the following
ratio equation to solve for an unknown.
Note: In the equation,
"metaphor" represents the large space you've chosen to
represent Geologic Time Scale.
Known Age of Past Event (Years Before
Present) Time Scale Metaphor (Distance Unknown)
X
-----------------------------------------------
= -----------------------------------------
Known Age of the Earth (Years Before Present) Maximum Measurement of Metaphor
Discuss the ratio equation above. Have students copy the
formula on a sheet of scratch paper, share the maximum
measurement of the space you are using for the Geologic Time
Scale metaphor, and add the known information into the
formula.
Take students to the space. Designate one end of the
space as Present and the other as the beginning of Earth's
history.
- Divide students into 5 groups. Assign one of the
above events to each group.
- Have groups calculate in yards (or feet depending
upon the metaphor) the distance the point on the scale at
which their assigned event took place.
Groups should move the appropriate distance from the
starting point on the space.
Once in place, in order, groups can name their event and
tell when it took place.
Gather students. Start a discussion comparing time from a
geologic point of view and time from a human point of view.
Do students agree or disagree that human beings are every
bit as catastrophic to the Earth's development as moving
crustal plates or ice ages? Why or why not?
Student Directed Activity
Have students follow the directions from their pages to
create an illustration of the geologic time scale using a
metaphor of their own choosing.
Management Tips and Hints
Rather than expect individuals to complete the metaphor
assignment as homework give groups class time to work
together on the assignment. Invite one group to create a
display for the class or the school to teach observers about
geologic time.
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