• How has the surface of our planet changed over time?
  • What clues are provided to show that the surface of our planet has changed?

Lesson Resources (per 2-3 students): I make these ahead of time to save time in class and I can reuse them for each class.

  • Handouts:
  • American Museum of Natural History -🧑🏻‍💻 Plates on the Move Game
    • students can work on this after their puzzles are done to explore tectonic plate movement
  • Foam Board
  • Glue stick
  • Disposable scalpel or sharp craft knife
  • Blue construction paper
  • Ziptop bag

Procedures:

Preparation

  1. Print out and glue landmasses to a piece of foam board
  2. Carefully cut out each land mass and fossil key
  3. Place into zip-top bag
pangea-foam-board-pieces.jpg
Glue landmasses onto foam board then cut out pieces

Class Activity

  1. Have students place the landmasses into their current geographic positions on top of the blue construction paper.
  2. What do they notice about the landmasses? Discuss.
  3. Ask students: “Do you think you can make one large landmass using the clues provided?”
  4. After a few minutes, check on their progress, what did they do first? What was giving them difficultly? Encourage students to try alternate possibilities.
  5. Discuss findings, what possibilities did they come up with?
  6. Ask students how the landmasses moved to their current position- accept all possibilities.
  7. Ask students: “Are the landmasses are still moving?”
  8. Show “Animated Life: Pangea” by the NYTimes
  9. Have students try to create Pangea again.
  10. Discuss.
Screen Shot 2016-06-16 at 8.54.30 PM
Pangea: Image Source NYTimes
  • NatGeo – additional information and maps on plate tectonics
  • Dynamic Earth learning – NOAA site about plate boundaries
  • Concord Consortium – students create their own tectonic plates and explore how they interact
  • Earth and Her Tectonic plates – is there an active or old tectonic plate boundary near you?
  • ⭐️ HHMI Earth Viewer “EarthViewer dynamically shows how continents grow and shift as students scroll through billions of years. Additional layers let students explore changes in atmospheric composition, temperature, biodiversity, day length, and solar luminosity over geologic time.”

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5 responses

  1. Pauala krekerberg Avatar
    Pauala krekerberg

    I loved this puzzle worksheet!

    Like

  2. Katie Homeschooling in PA Avatar
    Katie Homeschooling in PA

    Lovely activity Miss Liz! Thanks for sharing

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Lauren Pfenning Avatar
    Lauren Pfenning

    When I try to open a Read-Only activity
    it says I need a password? I signed up to receive your blog posts, but I’m not sure about a Password? Thanks…love your work.

    Like

    1. Lauren, you can download and open any of the read only ppts without the password, they just can’t be edited. I put passwords in to stop edits being made and then posted to other websites, like Teachers Pay Teachers. Glad you enjoy the site! ~ Liz

      Like

Comments are welcome!