Stormy weather refers to atmospheric conditions that are characterized by strong winds, heavy rainfall, thunder, lightning, and possibly hail. These conditions are typically associated with thunderstorms, hurricanes, and tornadoes.
Stormy weather is primarily caused by the interaction of different air masses with varying temperature, humidity, and pressure. When warm, moist air rises and meets cooler, drier air, it can lead to the formation of clouds, thunderstorms, and other severe weather phenomena.
There are several types of stormy weather, including:
Thunderstorms: These are characterized by thunder, lightning, heavy rain, and sometimes hail. They can occur as isolated events or as part of a larger weather system.
Hurricanes: These powerful tropical storms are characterized by high winds, heavy rain, and storm surges. They form over warm oceanwaters and can cause widespread destruction.
Tornadoes: These are highly localized, rotating columns of air that extend from a thunderstorm to the ground. They are often accompanied by strong winds and can cause significant damage.
Earth/Space Science: Students will use scientific skills and processes to explain the chemical and physical interactions (i.e., natural forces and cycles, transfer of energy) of the environment, Earth, and the universe that occur over time.
Earth History: Explain how sedimentary rock is formed periodically, embedding plant and animal remains and leaving a record of the sequence in which the plants and animals appeared and disappeared.
Explain how sedimentary rock buried deep enough may be reformed by pressure and heat and these reformed rock layers may be forced up again to become land surface and even mountains.
Explain why some fossils found in the top layers of sedimentary rock are older then those found beneath in lower layers: Folding; Breaking; Uplift; Faulting; Tilting.