-
Explain that air surrounds us, takes up space, moves around us as wind, and may be measured as barometric pressure.
-
Identify how water exists in the air in different forms (e.g., in clouds, fog, rain, snow and hail).
-
Investigate how water changes from one state to another (e.g., freezing, melting, condensation, evaporation).
-
Describe weather by measurable quantities such as temperature, wind direction, wind speed, precipitation, and barometric pressure.
Weather
-
Record local weather information on a calendar or map and describe changes over a period of time (e.g., barometric pressure, temperature, precipitation symbols, cloud conditions).
Weather
-
Trace how weather patterns generally move from west to east in the United States.
Weather
-
Describe the weather which accompanies cumulus, cumulonimbus, cirrus and stratus clouds.
Weather
-
Describe how wind, water and ice shape and reshape Earth's land surface by eroding rock and soil in some areas and depositing them in other areas producing characteristic landforms (e.g., dunes, deltas, glacial moraines).
-
Identify and describe how freezing, thawing and plant growth reshape the land surface by causing the weathering of rock.
-
Describe evidence of changes on Earth's surface in terms of slow processes (e.g., erosion, weathering, mountain building, deposition) and rapid processes (e.g. volcanic eruptions, earthquakes, landslides).