DETAILED LESSON PLAN Earth and Life Sciences Grade 11 Week 7
DETAILED LESSON PLAN Earth and Life Sciences Grade 11 Week 7
DETAILED LESSON PLAN Earth and Life Sciences Grade 11 Week 7
DATE Week 7
LESSON OUTLINE:
1. Introduction
2. Motivation – Class Participation
3. Instruction – Magma Properties
4. Practice – Conceptual Mapping
5. Enrichment
6. Evaluation
2. Review
a. Review the different types of igneous rocks based on silica content.
b. Review the processes for magma generation and where it is generated. Use the following
table to quickly run through these.
MOTIVATION:
Ask questions that will guide the students’ focus to the topics to be discussed, such as:
1. What happens to magma after it is formed?
2. Do you think magma rises or stays in place?
3. What happens to the composition of magma as it rises up?
1. Discuss why and how magma rises up (Monroe et al., Physical Geology, 2007, p107). Show a video of someone
Density contrast: magma is less dense than the surrounding country rock. Magma rises faster when the putting a coin, a piece of rock,
density contrast between the magma and the country rock is greater. and a piece of Styrofoam on a
pail/glass of water. Observe
At deeper levels, magma passes through mineral grain boundaries and cracks in the surrounding rock. When what happens to these
enough mass and buoyancy is attained, the overlying surrounding rock is pushed aside as the magma rises. materials. A guide question will
Depending on surrounding pressure and other factors, the magma can be ejected to the Earth’s surface or be: Which materials sink and
rise at shallower levels underneath. which ones float?
At shallower levels, magma may no longer rise because its density is almost the same as that of the country To illustrate viscosity, the
rock. The magma starts to accumulate and slowly solidifies. When the magma solidifies at depth, it can form teacher can show a video using
different types of plutonic bodies. at least three different liquids:
honey, oil, water.
Viscosity: A measure of a fluid’s resistance to flow. Magmas with low viscosity flow more easily than those Ask the learners to observe how
with high viscosity. Temperature, silica content and volatile content control the viscosity of magma. the different liquids flow (e.g.
very fast, fast, slow etc.).
Mafic magma is less viscous than silicic (felsic) magma because it is hotter and contains less silica.
2. Introduce and briefly discuss the Bowen’s reaction series (Carlson, D. H., Plummer, C. C., Hammersley L.,
Physical Geology Earth Revealed 9th ed., 2011, pp289-290)
a. Certain minerals are stable at higher melting temperature and crystallize before those stable at lower
temperatures.
b. This series explain how minerals are formed under different temperature conditions, given that all the
required elements for certain minerals are present.
c. There are two branches, the discontinuous and continuous branches which happen simultaneously. The
minerals in the discontinuous branch include olivine, pyroxene amphibole and biotite mica. In the
discontinuous branch, there is only plagioclase, but the Calcium and Sodium content changes from high
temperature to low temperature.
d. A single “parental magma” can produce various kinds of igneous rocks through magmatic
differentiation.
3. Discuss the relationship of the different igneous rock types and the environment of
formation(http://www.colorado.edu/geolsci/courses/GEOL3950/class_notes/Lecture
%20%239%20notes%202006.pdf):
a. Basalt and basaltic magma: form when hot rocks in the mantle slowly rise and encounter lower
pressures. This leads to decompression melting (melting due to reduced pressures). This commonly
occurs along places where plates are moving away from each other (i.e. extensional plate boundaries
such as continental rifts and hotspots. This type of magma has low viscosity, low silica, high iron and low
volatile (H2O) contents.
b. Rhyolite and rhyolitic magma: formed by either (1) melting of mantle fluxed by water and sediments
carried into the mantle in subduction zones; and /or (2) interaction of mantle derived basaltic magmas
with continental crust. The magma is highly viscous with relatively high silica, low iron and high volatile
(H2O) contents.
c. Andesite and andesitic magma: Andesitic magmas maybe formed in a variety of ways: some are formed
when water and sediments on the ocean floor are pushed into the mantle along subduction zones,
leading to melting in the mantle. Others are formed when hot basaltic magma interact with continental
crust on the way to the Earth’s surface, which likewise leads to melting. The silica, iron and volatile (H 2O)
contents and viscosity are intermediate between basalt and rhyolite.
PRACTICE:
Post a Bowen’s reaction series template and let the learners fill up the template by placing the words in their
correct number location.
12
1
13
3
4 11
14
5
10 15
6
7
16
8
2 9
ENRICHMENT:
1. Define viscosity.
Answer: Viscosity is the measure of a substance’s resistance to flow.
3. Describe how viscosity affects the movement of magma. Compare the viscosity of basaltic and granitic
magmas.
Answer: Viscosity is the measure of fluid’s resistance to flow. Mafic or basaltic magma, when compared to a
felsic or granitic magma is more mobile and flows faster as it is less viscous due to its higher temperature and
less silica content. Granitic magma does not reach the Earth’s surface as often due to its higher viscosity, but
in case, it tends to be thick, slow-moving and can only flow short distances.
4. True or False: Magmatic differentiation is the process of creating one or more secondary magmas from
single parent magma.
Answer: True.
9. True or False: The different mechanisms through which crystal fractionation occurs are crystal settling,
filter pressing, inward crystallization and flow segregation.
Answer: True.