ENCARTA
Pretend you are an alien explorer
from outer space looking for life on other planets. Your spaceship flies into a
group of stars that looks like a gigantic whirlpool. The whirlpool is the Milky
Way Galaxy.
You head for a star with nine
planets in one arm of the Milky Way. The third planet from the star is a
beautiful blue, white, and green ball. This planet looks like it has life. The
name of this planet is Earth.
HOW DOES EARTH MOVE IN SPACE?
Earth spins like a top on its axis.
Earth’s axis is an imaginary line that goes through Earth from the North Pole to
the South Pole. Earth’s axis is slightly tipped, like a spinning top leaning to
one side.
Earth travels around the Sun at
about 67,000 miles per hour (about 107,000 kilometers per hour). One year is one
trip around the Sun. Earth’s path around the Sun is slightly oval-shaped. This
oval shape causes Earth’s distance from the Sun to change during the year.
WHAT MAKES DAY AND NIGHT?
The Sun seems to rise in the
morning, cross the sky during the day, and set at night. However, the Sun does
not actually move around Earth. Earth’s turning on its axis makes it look as if
the Sun is moving.
Earth makes a complete turn on its
axis every 24 hours. As Earth turns, half of the planet faces the Sun, and the
other half faces away. It is daytime on the half facing the Sun. It is night on
the half facing away from the Sun.
WHY ARE THERE SEASONS?
Earth has seasons because of the
tilt of its axis. For part of the year, the top half of Earth is tipped toward
the Sun. The top half of Earth is called the Northern Hemisphere. During another
part of the year, the bottom half of Earth is tipped toward the Sun. The bottom
half is called the Southern Hemisphere. It is summer in the half that is tipped
toward the Sun. It is winter in the half tipped away. When it is summer in the
Northern Hemisphere, it is winter in the Southern Hemisphere. During spring and
fall the hemispheres are tipped neither toward nor away from the Sun.
The equator is an imaginary line
around Earth’s middle. The farther you are from the equator, the greater the
difference in temperature between seasons. The equator never tips far from the
Sun. Near the equator it is warm enough to go swimming all year long. The
average temperature barely changes from month to month. In Alaska, far from the
equator, the average temperature in January can be more than 60 degrees colder
than it is in July.
WHY IS THERE LIFE ON EARTH?
Earth has just the right conditions
for life. It is not too hot or too cold. Earth has lots of liquid water and an
atmosphere (gases) that can support life.
The first kinds of life may have
appeared on Earth 3.8 billion (3,800,000,000) years ago. Several times during
Earth’s history, almost all life went extinct, or disappeared. Each time, some
life forms survived. The survivors spread all over the planet. Dinosaurs
appeared about 230 million years ago. Dinosaurs went extinct about 65 million
years ago. Scientists believe that modern humans appeared about 130,000 years
ago.
WHAT IS THE INSIDE OF EARTH LIKE?
Earth is made of layers. The top
layer is called the crust. It is made of hard rock and soil.
More than 70 percent of Earth’s
crust is covered with water. Most of the water is salt water in the ocean.
Pieces of dry land called continents rise above the ocean. The part of Earth’s
crust under the ocean is called the seafloor.
Under the crust is a layer of
partly melted rock called the mantle. Under the mantle is Earth’s core. The core
is mostly iron. The outer part of the core is liquid metal. The inside of the
core is solid metal. Scientists believe that the liquid metal makes Earth a
giant magnet and creates Earth’s magnetic field.
Earth’s crust is made of gigantic
slabs of rock called plates that move over the mantle. Plates crash together to
make mountains. They pull apart and let red-hot rock ooze up from inside Earth
to make new crust.
HOW DID EARTH FORM?
Scientists think that Earth and
the rest of the solar system formed from a spinning cloud of gas and dust.
Gravity pulled most of the gas and dust together to form the Sun. Some leftover
gas and dust formed Earth and the other planets. Scientists think that Earth and
the Moon formed about 4.6 billion years ago.
Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
Comments
Post a Comment