California’s Mineral, Energy, and Soil Resources Chapter 13A, Section 1.

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California’s Mineral, California’s Mineral, Energy, and Soil Energy, and Soil Resources Resources Chapter 13A, Section 1 Chapter 13A, Section 1

Transcript of California’s Mineral, Energy, and Soil Resources Chapter 13A, Section 1.

Page 1: California’s Mineral, Energy, and Soil Resources Chapter 13A, Section 1.

California’s Mineral, Energy, California’s Mineral, Energy, and Soil Resourcesand Soil Resources

Chapter 13A, Section 1Chapter 13A, Section 1

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Geology of CaliforniaGeology of California• Some of the features of the California landscape

formed as the result of tectonic processes that took place deep beneath the surface

• Wind, water, ice, and other agents of erosion at the surface carved other features of the landscape

• Millions of years ago, the subduction of an oceanic plate beneath the North American plate forming large pools of magma and later crystallizing

• Uplift and erosion eventually exposed these batholiths to form the Sierra Nevada Mountains

• Surface processes formed places like the Central Valley (used to be an inland sea)

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California’s Mineral ResourcesCalifornia’s Mineral Resources• California’s major mineral resources include sand, gravel,

crushed stone, building stone, gold, silver, iron, evaporite minerals, and clay

• Sand and gravel are California’s most valuable industrial minerals, used in road-building and construction

• Gold, silver, and iron are the major metallic minerals mined in California

• The most productive gold mines include the Sierra Nevada, the Klamath Mountains, and the Mojave Desert

• Silver is mined in the Sierra Nevada• Iron is from the Mojave desert region• We also have an abundance of non-metallic minerals,

including: borates, gypsum, and clay• Small quantities of gemstones, such as tourmaline, garnet,

agate, and jade

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California’s Mineral ResourcesCalifornia’s Mineral Resources

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Concept CheckConcept Check

• What does the term mineral resources mean?

• Natural resources that include minerals, rocks, and sediment

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California’s Energy ResourcesCalifornia’s Energy Resources

• California’s major energy resources—oil, natural gas, and geothermal energy—are the result of geologic processes that occur deep beneath the surface

• Source Rocks – rocks in which oil forms

• Reservoir Rocks – porous rocks in which oil collects and becomes trapped

• Geothermal Field – an area of land where magma lies relatively close to the surface and heats the groundwater

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Geothermal EnergyGeothermal Energy

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Concept CheckConcept Check

• What is a geothermal field?

• An area where magma that is close to the surface heats the groundwater.

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California’s Soil ResourcesCalifornia’s Soil Resources• The soils of California include soils of the

Sierras, soils of the Coast Ranges and Cascades, valley soils (including the Central Valley), and desert soils

• CA’s fertile valley soils are its most important soil resource

• In northern CA, heavy rains wash away the nutrients from the soil

• In southern CA, the soils contain more nutrients, due to the small amount of rainfall

• Every year, many acres of farmland are lost or damaged because of soil erosion or the spread of urban areas

• It can take over 500 years to build up 2.5 cm of soil

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California’s Soil ResourcesCalifornia’s Soil Resources

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AssignmentAssignment

• Read Chapter 13A (pg. CA 4 – CA 26)

• Ch 13 Assessment– # 1 – 33 (pg. CA 31 – CA 32)– # 1 – 6 (pg. CA 33)