Tassomai

View Original

Tricky topics #2 - Earth's Early Atmosphere

We’ve looked through the Tassomai data, and found some of the topics that our GCSE science students find the hardest! We’ll post a brief explainer on each of these topics over the next few weeks in the run up to exam season. Give this series a read if you, your child or your students are struggling with any part of Tassomai - even if these particular topics aren’t problematic, we’ll also touch on some common errors students make when answering questions on Tassomai!

Understanding how the Earth’s Early Atmosphere changed

Lots of our students seem to struggle with questions about how the Earth’s early atmosphere changed, so we’ve gone over that here.

Here’s an example Tassomai Question:

Discover Tassomai, the secret to good grades! Click student, teacher or parent to learn more.

When the Earth’s atmosphere first formed, it consisted of approximately 95% carbon dioxide, 3% nitrogen and 0.05% oxygen. Now, it is approximately 78% nitrogen, 20% oxygen and only 0.05% carbon dioxide, and it has been like this for approximately 200 million years - but how did these change happen?

Scientists believe that the majority of the gases which made up the Earth’s early atmosphere, a few billion years ago, were formed by volcanic activity - causing it to be primarily carbon dioxide. It was only after the volcanic activity had subsided that the atmosphere began to change.


What caused these changes?

Decrease in amount of Carbon Dioxide

See this content in the original post

The Earth’s Early Atmosphere - mainly carbon dioxide, but with some oxygen and nitrogen

Increase in amount of Oxygen

See this content in the original post

The Earth’s Atmosphere now - oxygen levels have increased slightly due to photosynthesis, while carbon dioxide levels have decreased drastically as it dissolved in the sea. Nitrogen levels have remained basically the same

No change in amount of Nitrogen

This seems counterintuitive - the atmosphere has gone from being 3% nitrogen to being 78% nitrogen, so how can the amount of nitrogen not have changed? What has actually happened is that, while the amount of nitrogen hasn’t significantly changed, the decrease in carbon dioxide means that there is relatively more nitrogen compared to the other gases. Therefore the proportion of the atmosphere made up of nitrogen has increased - even though there is no more nitrogen than before.

The answer to this question

Therefore the answer to this question is A - the proportion of nitrogen has increased as carbon dioxide dissolved into the oceans, but it has not been created by photosynthesis (B) or by human activity (C). A lot of students choose D for this question, because they assume “All of these” is always right when it is one of the answers - so make sure you read the entire question! Examiner’s reports always mention students not reading questions properly, so make sure you practice doing that on Tassomai now.


Discover the secret to good grades

Schools can trial Tassomai for 3 weeks and private subscribing families get a 7-day free trial. Click a link below to learn more about Tassomai: