Electricity, electrical circuits Year 10

Electricity, electrical circuits Year 10

Electricity, electrical circuits Year 10

Series and parallel circuits. Basic notes and a quiz

Watch the video showing series and parallel circuits with two light bulbs. Read over your class notes and get help from the text book if you need to.

Series and Parallel circuits

In a series circuit the components are connected in such a way that the current flows from one component to the other all the way round the circuit. In a parallel circuit the current branches and can follow more than one pathway

  • What happens in a series circuit when a bulb is removed?
  • What happens in a parallel circuit when a bulb is removed?
  • Think about the brightness of the bulbs

then try the quiz. Make sure you click the submit button when you finish. Finally, the video is very boring. Make your own video to demonstrate the difference between series and parallel circuits

Series and Parallel Circuit Quiz

Series and Parallel Circuits for experts.

Hydrothermal activity at Orakei Korako and the extremophiles that survive there (cyanobacteria)

Hydrothermal activity at Orakei Korako and the extremophiles that survive there (cyanobacteria)

Hydrothermal activity at Orakei Korako and the extremophiles that survive there (cyanobacteria)

Western Heights High School students recently visited the hydrothermal area at Orakei Korako. This was part of their Level 2 Earth and Space Science programme. ( AS 91190 Investigate how organisms survive in an extreme environment)

Cyanobacteria are named after the bluish pigment phycocyanin, which they use to capture light for photosynthesis. They also contain chlorophyll the pigment used by plants to photosynthesise. Cyanobacteria predate plants. In fact the chloroplast in plants evolved when a cyanobacterium was absorbed by a green algal ancestor of  plants more than 600 million years ago.

Not all cyanobacteria are blue, some are red or pink from the pigment phycoerythrin  Red cyanobacteria can be found found growing around sinks and drains. African flamingos get their pink color from eating spirulina.

The important point is that cyanobacteria photosynthesise.

Nga Tapuwai o Mataoho, footprints of Mataoho. Mangere Mountain

Nga Tapuwai o Mataoho, footprints of Mataoho. Mangere Mountain

Nga Tapuwai o Mataoho, footprints of Mataoho. Mangere Mountain

Mangere Mountain has a number of important features for Auckland Volcanic Field geeks to get excited about.

  • the shape of the scoria cone (steep sided compared with Rangitoto a shield volcano where the molten basalt flowed freely without a high gas content.)
  • major landsape features and processes (explosion crater, large southern cone with a smaller cone to the north)
    Other landscape features including a breach on the eastern side of the southern cone that allowed basalt to flow freely where the football fields are now. Another minor breach that local Maori had to fortify to prevent incursions by unwelcome guests
  • Assorted lava bombs and evidence of fire fountaining as volcanic activity waned
  • Human impact through stone gardens, kumara pits. There was substantial quarying as durable basalt and scoria were removed for building purposes.

The mountain is still there but the Greenbay High School students who went on this trip have now moved onwards upwards and sideways

Mangere Mountain field trip 2011 from john west on Vimeo.

Pupuke an early eruption in the Auckland volcanic field looking towards the youngest, Rangitoto.

Pupuke an early eruption in the Auckland volcanic field looking towards the youngest, Rangitoto.

Pupuke an early eruption in the Auckland volcanic field looking towards the youngest, Rangitoto.

Exam revision

Study revision: The Auckland Volcanic field

  • Look at the presentation on the Pupuke eruption in the Auckland volcanic field. It’s a good example of the stages that eruptions generally follow (explosion crater, scoria cones, lava fields). Take time to do this properly. There is no easy shortcut to success at level 2.
  • Ask for help when it doesn’t make sense.
  • Tackle the question on the formation of pupuke ( a large explosion crater, small scoria cones buried under lava flows, lava field that flowed through an ancient forests.
  • Don’t sweat the small stuff, ask for assistance early

How do I answer the Question?

Don’t sweat lots of small stuff. Use NCEA assessment schedules to find what examiners are looking for. The list below consists of phrases and ideas from an an NCEA assessment schedule used with a similar question about the Auckland volcanic field.

Develop  these phrases and ideas into paragraphs. This should at the very least ensure get “achieved” in any question on the Auckland volcanic field. Finally make sure you have a sentence explaing each of the labels on the stylised scoria cone in the presentation.

Adapted from ESS Extreme Events 2012

  • Lake Pupuke formed when the hot basalt came in contact with the cold sea water or wet sedimentary deposits
  • the eruption became very violent forming steam
  • Material blasted out of the volcano upwards and outwards
  • Formation of a tuff ring and a large explosion crater
  • Scoria cones, steep sided. Lumps of hot lava thrown upwards and outwards from volcano in a molten state.
  • Scoria. Gasses trapped in the magma drive the eruption. Fire fountaining.
  • Steep sided scoria cones built up.

Where does the magma come from, lava flows?

  • Hot spots where magma from the mantle rises towards the surface.
  • Basaltic lava forces its way through the overlying crust
  • There is no magma chamber
  • Melted magma has come from great depths
  • Same chemical composition as the mantle.
  • Basalt has low viscosity
  • Low silica content. Silica lends the viscosity component hence basalt has low viscosity
  • Lava flows out over the edge of the tuff ring.

General sequence for Auckland volcanoes

  • Phreatomagmatic explosion
  • Large explosion crater
  • Tuff ring
  • Lava fields as low viscosity basalt pumped up through a vent over the tuff ring

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