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Identifying
Watersheds w/ Topographic Maps
Keywords: water
cycle, hydrology, precipitation, surface water, runoff, infiltrate,
groundwater, aquifer, transpiration, evaporation, confluence, topographic
map, contour lines, elevation, watershed
Prepared by: George Ness, BLaST IU17; LaSaQuik Alternative
Education Program
Lesson Plan Grade Level: sixth through eighth grade
Total Time Required for Lesson: one 1.5-hour session or two
45-minute sessions
Setting: open area outside the classroom
Subjects Covered: earth science, geography, ecology
Topics: watersheds and topographic maps
Goals for the Lesson
- Students will work
cooperatively to complete various components of the lesson.
- Students will identify
the features of a watershed.
- Students will identify
how topographic features create and comprise a watershed.
Materials Needed
- laminated topographic
maps of local area; topographic maps can be ordered from the U.S.
Geological Survey
- dry-erase markers
- aluminum foil
- crumpled newspapers
- plastic cups
- droppers
- paper towels
State Standards Addressed:
E & E Standards: Watersheds and Wetlands (4.1); Ecosystems
and Their Interactions (4.6); Humans and the Environment (4.8)
Teaching Model:
Focus-Explore-Reflect-Apply Learning Cycle
Preparation
Secure maps from available
resource. Have maps laminated. Have all materials on hand and ready.
Prompt students by having them recall what they learned from previous
lessons related to the water cycle and topographic maps.
Introductory Activity
(outside the classroom)
(adapted from Incredible Water w/ the Water Lion)
- Divide class into
groups of three or four students/group.
- Each group is given
a large piece of aluminum foil.
- Each group is to create
a watershed by placing the foil over crumpled up newspapers to
create a simulated landscape with mountains, valleys, and a lowland
area. All parts of the foil should drain into the single low area.
The outer edges should be turned upward to keep the water on the
surface of the foil.
- Fill a plastic cup
halfway with water and mark the water level on the outside of
the cup with a marker.
- Each group is to then
put the half-cup of water into a spray bottle and use the sprayer
to make it "rain" on the watershed. Be sure to spray
all of the water.
- Observe how the water
moves in the watershed. Catch all the runoff water in the cup
at the low area. Note how much water moved through the watershed.
Was some water retained in/on the watershed? What do these bodies
of water represent?
- Remove all the water
from the watershed, using a medicine dropper if necessary, and
place all the water back in the cup. When you have removed as
much water as possible, make a mark on the cup to indicate the
new water level.
- Now, put pieces of
paper towel on the high parts of the model watershed. They will
imitate the effect of the ground storing some of the water.
- Again use the spray
bottles to make it "rain" on the watersheds. Observe.
- Again, return as much
standing water as possible to the cup. Compare the water levels.
What does this tell you about ground water?
- Ask students to explain
how what was just demonstrated represents the water cycle.
Follow-up Activity
- Divide class into
three groups (appx. six students per group).
- Each group is given
a topographic map of the local area of the county in which the
school is located.
- Ask the students to
identify/describe what they are looking at.
- See if anyone can
locate our specific location on the maps.
- After ascertaining
the extent of the class's knowledge, ask the students to recall
the concept of a topographic map (how it is a two-dimensional
representation of the three dimensions of the surface of the land).
- Referring to the topographic
maps, have each group identify the following:
- a mountain top
- a mountain ridge
- a steep mountain
slope
- a gentle slope
- a stream
- the confluence
of two streams
- a field or lowland
area
- cities or towns
- Have the groups focus
in on the specific section of the map that represents the location
of the school. Have them locate the stream that flows by the school's
property. Trace the stream upstream to determine it's origin and
also downstream to where it meets up with a larger stream.
- Challenge the groups
to mark the surrounding area that delineates the stream's watershed.
Have them mark the laminated maps with dry erase markers to indicate
the watershed boundaries.
- Have the groups share
their mappings.
- Ask for someone to
explain the connection between the two activities (the activity
involving the foil models of a water shed and the activity of
analyzing the topographic maps).
Assessment
During the next school
day, arrange class time so students can be dealt with individually
to assess their knowledge and understanding of topographic maps
and watersheds. Present each student in turn with a topographic
map different from the one they studied the previous day. Use a
map of the entire county or one representing a similar but different
local area. Have each student identify each of the eight items asked
for in step 6 of the map activity as well as having the student
mark a watershed area with a dry erase marker.
Extension
- Arrange a visit to
a private home located along Pine Creek where the homeowner has
an entire wall of his mudroom covered with topographic maps that
cover parts of six counties of north-central PA. Students can
locate the site of the school and explore the watersheds throughout
the area that leads into the Susquehanna River. Use this activity
as a springboard into a lesson on stream analysis; analyzing the
stream close to its source and then at a point after it has passed
by farmed land and urbanized land area.
- Have students identify
on the map where the stream by the school facility leads into
a wetland area just prior to where the stream leads into a larger
stream. Use this as a springboard to a discussion of or lessons
on wetlands. On a future class day arrange for a field lesson
when students will travel along the stream to the wetland area
where they can explore and identify the various components of
the wetland.
References
Incredible Water with
the Water Lion (2002). University Park, Pa.: The Pennsylvania
State University.
Yoas Services, 509 W
4th St., Williamsport, PA. Phone: 570-326-2041 (vendor of topographic
maps)
Swistock, Bryan, and
Sanford S. Smith (2001). From
the Woods: Watersheds. University Park, Pa.: The Pennsylvania
State University.
Topographic maps can
also be ordered from the U.S. Geological Survey
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