Our Planet
Shaping the Earth
Natural Disasters
EXTRA
100

How deeply into the Earth’s crust have we been able to drill?

About 7 miles

100

Which process is a type of chemical weathering?

a: Oxidation

b: freeze/thaw

c: carbon dioxide reaction

Oxidation

100

 In which states are you most likely to have experienced a hurricane? 

a: Wyoming and Montana

b: Missouri and Illinois

c: Florida and Louisiana

Florida and Louisiana

100

What is erosion?

A process of being moved or eroded by wind, water or other natural agents. 
200

Which part of the Earth’s interior is the largest?

Mantle

200

How are glaciers formed?

d: Over time, snow compacts into dense ice.

200

In the United States, most earthquakes occur ______.

a: in January, February and March

b: along the fault lines in California, Washington and Oregon

c: at the same time as the volcano in Asia

b: along the fault lines in California, Washington and Oregon

200

Name the 4 water cycle processes. 

Evaporation, condensation, precipitation and collection. 

300

Earth’s water cycle is most closely associated with which sphere?

hydrosphere

300

What percentage of the Earth’s fresh water do glaciers hold?

85%

300

List 4 natural disasters

Tornadoes, hurricanes, earthquakes and volcanoes.

300

Name the 4 spheres of the Earth.

Hydrosphere, Lithosphere (geosphere), atmosphere, and biosphere.

400

How does the Earth’s atmosphere interact with the sun’s rays?

a: The atmosphere absorbs the sun’s energy and holds it as heat to warm the Earth.

400

Effects of which of the following processes that change and shape the Earth would most likely be seen immediately?

Volcano

400

What are tsunamis?

A huge wave of water that crashes on shore due to a disturbance in the ocean. 

400

Living plants are most closely related to which sphere?

Biosphere

500

The oceanic crust of the Earth is fairly thin. How thick is it?

It is 4 to 7 miles thick

500

What are the five main causes of physical weathering?

Physical weathering may be caused by people or animals wearing rock down, wind or water carrying rocks and sand over the surface, roots pushing on rock, pressure from within the Earth, and the effects of freeze/thaw.

500

Name one way how the Earth is never really still. It must be an example from Studies Weekly article. 

Water is constantly changing between solid, liquid and vapor; the sun’s energy warms the Earth unevenly and causes air currents and storm fronts. Even the lithosphere, which we think of as solid and fi rm, is actually slowly moving. Tectonic plates are shifting, and inside the Earth, magma is heating and moving into empty spaces and creating pressure—pressure that needs to be released at the Earth’s surface.

500

What is the difference between physical and chemical weathering?

Physical weathering is through the force of another substance like ice, water or wind. Chemical weathering is when a reaction occurs between rock and another substance. 

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