Earthquakes, Ocean Floors, and Shorelines
Earth's Crust, Mountains, and Mass Movement
Running Water and Groundwater
Glaciers, Glaciation, Deserts and Winds
Geologic Time, Earth's Evolution, and Climate Changes
100

This is the study or practice of measuring ocean floor depth. 

What is Bathometry

100

These are the three types of plate boundaries.

What are Divergent, Convergent, and Transform

100

This is an impermeable layer of strata (e.g. clays) that hinder or prevent underground water movement.

What are Aquitards

100

This is the name of sediments that are moved and deposited by glaciers.

What is Drift or Till

100

There are the TWO types of 'dating' that scientists use to determine the general and specific age of rocks. 

What is Absolute and Relative Dating

200

Groins and jetties are two examples of these - meant to protect shorelines and coasts from erosion.

What are Hard Stabilization techniques.

200

This is the steepest angle (relative to a horizontal plane) at which unconsolidated grains of sand remain stable without sliding due to gravity.

What is an Angle of Repose

200

This is the process where sediments bounce along the bottom of a river system.

What is Saltation

200

A product of glacial movement and abrasion, these are grooved impressions made in the bedrock as glaciers flow and advance forward?

What are Striations

200

Inclusions of 'these' can be used to help correlate the specific age of a rock strata through a process of radiocarbon dating.

What are fossils (index fossils and assemblages)

300

Using three types of these machines can help us triangulate the location of an earthquake and measures the foreshocks and aftershocks of an earthshaking event.

What are Seismographs

300

This type of stress causes crustal deformation equally from each side and from top to bottom

What is Confining Pressure

300

A general term given to sediment that is deposited by streams or running water.

What is Alluvium

300

This is the general shape of a valley where glacial activity has occurred

What is U-shaped
300

This principle states that layers of sediment are generally deposited in a horizonal position.

What is the Principle of Original Horizontality

400

This scale helps to determine the size of an earthquake by comparing amplitude of the largest seismic wave recorded, decrease in wave amplitude, and increased distance.

What is the Richter Scale

400

The official name of earth's major mountain building events, which formed along convergent plate boundaries during the recent geologic past.

What is an Orogeny (orogenesis)

400

This is an inevitable result of groundwater being removed in massive amounts over the course of many years.

What is Subsidence

400

Multiple variations of these are formed by wind, where mounds or ridges of sand or other loose sediment collect, especially found along shorelines or in a desert.

What are Dunes

400

These were giant trees that dominated the Mesozoic era that did not require freestanding water for fertilization.

What are Gymnosperms

500

During an earthquake, periods of ground shaking can cause water-saturated surface materials to behave as a fluid-like mass in this process.

What is Liquefaction

500

This is the principle that describes how earth's crust has variable buoyancy - subsiding and rebounding due to weight added and removed above the denser mantle. 

What is Isostacy

500

This is the specific zone of a river system where meandering streams are prevalent.

What is the Zone of Transport

500

This is a feature of a glacier where ice flows into the sea, with the thickest parts on the landward side and thin, more unstable parts seaward.

What is an Ice Shelf

500

This is the general term or zone given to Earth's position in the solar system - describing that the Earth is the perfect temperature, perfect distance from the sun, and has the right elements and atmosphere to support life. 

The Goldilocks Zone

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