The thin outermost layer of Earth.
What is the crust?
The physical break-up or disintegration of rocks
What is mechanical weathering?
A method of measurement scientists use to describe the magnitude of earthquakes.
What is the Richter scale?
The earliest supercontinent.
What is Rodinia?
When water penetrates the bones of a dead animal, the water dissolves the calcium carbonate in the bones. A deposit of another very hard mineral, silica (quartz) remains, turning the bones in a rock-like substance.
What is petrified?
The building block of minerals
What are crystals?
One of the most powerful causes of erosion.
What is water in motion? Not just water, water in motion.
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When volcanoes are not active they are described as this.
This is made up of the volcanoes around the Pacific Ocean.
What is the Ring of Fire?
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Sometimes the actual organism or part of it may be preserved as a fossil.
What are original remains?
Melted rock below the surface called ______ is called ________when it solidified on the Earth's surface.
What is
magma
igneous rock
The three layers of the Earth in order from the top of the Earth to the center
What is the crust, mantle, core?
This folding action in mountain formation occurs when sedimentary rock is squeezed from the sides, forming into slabs that move up and over each other like shingles on a roof.
What is thrust faulting?
Wind erodes rock when it picks up loose sediment such as clay, silt, and sand; and these windblown particles strike rock and wear it down.
What is abrasion?

In undisturbed layers of rock, the oldest layers are always on the bottom and the youngest layers are on the top.
What is the principle of superposition?
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The processes that turn metamorphic rock into sediment.
What is weathering and erosion?
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The theory that geological plates are always moving on the Earth's mantle.
When tectonic forces stretch the Earth's crust, blocks form that can tilt or slide down. These huge amount of rocks can form mountains.
What are fault block mountains?
Magma that cools and hardens below the Earth's surface. It may later be exposed by erosion.

What is intrusive rock?

A heavy almost solid form of petroleum.

What is bitumen?
In sedimentary rock, the sediments become closely packed in layers and cemented together.
What is stratification?
When two plates collide or converge one is shoved under the other.
What is a subduction zone?
The three types of seismic waves that occur during an earthquake.
What are
Primary or P waves
Secondary or S waves
Surface waves
When the bitumen is too deep for mining to be economical, the underground oil sands reservoir is heated with this and the melted bitumen is pumped to the surface.
What is steam?

A natural occurring mixture of hydrocarbons, such as bitumen, coal, oil and gas.
What is petroleum?
