Overview
In this activity, students diagram the carbon cycle. A lot of the concepts presented here are necessary in order to fully understand the greenhouse effect and global warming. This lesson is presented as an activity to do before embarking on a study of the greenhouse effect and global warming.
Objective
Students understand that the total amount of carbon on Earth is constant.
Students understand that limestone rock is by far the most important reservoir of carbon on Earth.
Students understand that CO2 in the atmosphere is one of the smallest reservoirs of carbon on earth, and that even small changes to the carbon cycle can have big impacts on atmospheric CO2 concentrations.
Students understand that burning fossil fuels releases carbon into the atmosphere that has been sequestered for millions of years.
Preparation
Since the carbon cycle is so complicated, it is a good idea for students to have previously studied the much simpler water cycle.
Procedure
Show the Power Point
Pass around hand samples of limestone, coal, peat, crude oil, gasoline.
Have students build ball-and-stick models of elemental carbon (C), carbon dioxide (CO2), carbonic acid (H2CO3), bicarbonate (HCO3-), carbonate (CO3-2), calcium carbonate (CaCO3), and methane (CH4) while chanting the chemical names out loud.
Discuss
Read through the handout
Show student work
Turn students loose to complete the diagram
Extension
This assignment together with the energy non-cycle diagram are good ways to lead into a study of the greenhouse effect and global warming.
Assessment
The diagram is graded holistically. Emphasis is given to the clarity with which the concept of “cycle” is graphically expressed. Questions on a unit exam test specific content knowledge. For instance “Where is most of the Earth’s carbon stored?”
Credits
Michael Wing, wing [at] marin.k12.ca.us
Standards
9-12 Content Standard C: Life Science: Content Standard D: Earth ad Space Science: Content Standard F: Science In Personal and Social Perspectives: e. Matter, energy, and organization in living systems b. Geochemical cycles c. Natural resourcesStandards Other
n/a
Attachment | Size |
---|---|
Download Lesson (PDF - 173 KB)172.66 KB | 172.66 KB |
Diagram Handout (PDF - 25.6 KB)25.57 KB | 25.57 KB |
Student Work (PDF - 1.1 MB)1.12 MB | 1.12 MB |
Download Powerpoint (PPT - 1 MB)1 MB | 1 MB |