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Rinehart, Ronald – Science Teacher, 2020
Helping students understand that the scientific community's claims change through time, sometimes radically, allows them to develop a well-grounded sense of the "nature of science." Learning to reason about how scientific claims come to be accepted, and later refuted, is important for understanding the tentative nature of scientific…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Geology, Scientific Concepts, Science Process Skills
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Dolphin, Glenn – Science & Education, 2009
Current high school Earth Science curricula and textbooks organize scientific content into isolated "units" of knowledge. Within this structure, content is taught, but in the absence of the context of fundamental understandings or the process of how the science was actually done to reach the conclusions. These are two key facets of scientific…
Descriptors: Units of Study, Plate Tectonics, Scientific Literacy, Grade 9
Stein, Ross S.; Yeats, Robert S. – Scientific American, 1989
Points out that large earthquakes can take place not only on faults that cut the earth's surface but also on blind faults under folded terrain. Describes four examples of fold earthquakes. Discusses the fold earthquakes using several diagrams and pictures. (YP)
Descriptors: Earth Science, Earthquakes, Geology, Plate Tectonics
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Achache, Jose – Impact of Science on Society, 1987
Discusses some of the events leading to the development of the theory of plate tectonics. Describes how seismic, volcanic, and tectonic features observed at the surface of the planet are now seen as a consequence of intense internal activity, and makes suggestions about their further investigation. (TW)
Descriptors: College Science, Geology, Global Approach, Higher Education
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Fichter, Lynn Stanton – Journal of Geological Education, 1987
Discusses the use of a strip log as a diagrammatic representation of the information available in a sequence of sedimentary rocks. Describes the design of the strip log (both symbolically and by visual/spatial patterns) and some of the possible interpretations that can be made using them. (TW)
Descriptors: College Science, Diagrams, Environmental Influences, Geology