Valeska Rickman

Lissete De Alba

Weather Fronts and Air Masses

Grade: 7

30-40 minutes

GLCE: E.ES.07.74

Describe weather conditions associated with frontal boundaries (cold, warm, stationary, and occluded) and the movement of major air masses and the jet streams across North America using a weather map.

Objective:

Students will be able to define cold, warm, stationary, occluded fronts as well as air masses and describe the weather associated with these properties.

Materials:

For each group:

·  1 glass bowl filled with room temperature water

·  1 cup of hot water with red food coloring

·  1 cup of cold water with blue food coloring

·  1 marinating syringe

References:

http://ww2010.atmos.uiuc.edu/(Gh)/guides/mtr/af/frnts/home.rxml

http://www.classzone.com/books/earth_science/terc/content/visualizations/es2002/es2002page01.cfm?chapter_no=visualization

http://www.teachervision.fen.com/tv/printables/TCR/0743936671_030-031.pdf

http://earthstorm.mesonet.org/materials/ref_weatherfronts.php

Ahrens, Donald. Essentials of Meteorology. 5. Belmont, CA: Thomson, 2008.

Engage:

Does everybody remember Halloween this year, just a few weeks ago? Who went trick-or-treating? Anybody pass out candy? What was the weather like that day? (warm and sunny) That’s right it was nice and warm and sunny. But what happened just 2 or 3 days later? What was the weather like then? (cold and cloudy) Why do you think that happened? How could that change in weather come so relatively fast? Well, lets find out!

Explore:

Students will conduct the hands-on activity with different colored water temperatures represented by different colors in a glass bowl.


Explain:

We will explain that cold and hot water behave the same way as cold and warm air in the atmosphere. We will introduce the different types of fronts: cold, warm, stationary, and occluded. We will also explain the properties of air masses.

Elaborate:

Students will predict what the weather would be like in a particular region on a U.S. map depending on the fronts that are affecting the region.

Evaluate:

Students will have a homework assignment to bring back the next day, which will ask what they have learned.


Hands-on Experiment

(Students will get into 3 or 4 groups of 4)

·  Students will have a bowl filled with room temperature water, a cup with cold blue water, a cup with warm red water, and a marinating syringe.

·  They will take the marinated syringe and fill it half way with the cold blue water.

·  They will insert the syringe about halfway down into the bowl then slowly push the cold blue water out.

·  They will then fill the syringe about halfway with hot red water.

·  They will put the syringe halfway down the bowl then slowly push the hot water out.

·  Students will observe to see what happens and record their findings on the activity observations worksheet.

Activity Observations

What happened to the cold blue water when you put it in the glass bowl? / What happened to the hot red water when you put it in the glass bowl?
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Draw what you saw happen to the cold blue water in the bowl. / Draw what you saw happen to the red hot water in the bowl.

List of Facts

Air mass- Large body of air remains over an area for several days or weeks, the body of air may change its thermal or moisture properties according to the land or water under it. The air exchanges heat with the land or water; either warming or cooling until its temperature closely matches that of the surface below it.

Cold front- cold and warm fronts meet and cold front pushes warm front up and away. Clouds form; result may be rain or even thunderstorm.

Warm front- cold and warm front meet; warm front slides over cold front. Condensation occurs and a drizzle or slow steady rain results.

Stationary front- when neither air mass can overpower each other and may not move for a long time. A long steady rain is usually associated with this front.

Occluded front- may begin as a stationary front when cold air moves on the west side of the line made by the front, while warm air moves on the east side of the line. Eventually the cold air lifts the warm air above it, so warm air is over the cold air mass. Occluded fronts always bring precipitation.

Name: ______Date: ______

Weather Conditions

1. Describe the different types of fronts located on the map below; identifying them by color.

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2.  Cold and warm front meet; warm front slides over cold front, condensation occurs and a drizzle or slow steady rain results.

a)  warm front

b)  cold front

c)  air mass

d)  stationary front

3.  Cold and warm front meet and cold front pushes warm front up and away.

a)  warm front

b)  cold front

c)  occluded front

d)  stationary front

4.  When neither air masses can overpower each other and may not move for a long time.

a)  cold front

b)  warm front

c)  occluded front

d)  stationary front

5.  May begin as a stationary front; eventually the cold air lifts the warm air above it, so warm air is over the cold air while still being pushed by the cold air mass.

a)  cold front

b)  warm front

c)  occluded front

d)  jet stream

True or False

6.  Stationary fronts usually produce hot, dry climates. T/F

7.  Occluded fronts always bring precipitation. T/F

8.  Air mass is a body of air that resembles the characteristics of the surface under it. T/F


Fill in the blank

9.  If air mass moves over land you get ______climate.

10. If air mass moves over water you get ______climate.