What method of dating rocks uses the decay of radioactive isotopes to calculate age?
What is absolute age dating?
What is the name for the point on Earth's surface directly above the earthquake's origin?
What is the epicenter?
What are the three types of tectonic plate motions?
what are Convergent, Divergent, and Transform?
The theory that says Earth’s outermost layer is broken into plates that move because of mantle convection.
What is Plate Tectonic Theory?
At this boundary, magma is generated by decompression melting because rocks rise and cross the solidus at lower pressures. (depressurization)
What is an Ocean-Ocean Divergent boundary (the Mid-Ocean Ridge)?
According to the principle of superposition, where in a sequence of undisturbed sedimentary layers would you find the oldest rocks?
What is the bottom layer?
Which seismic wave is the fastest and can travel through solids, liquids, and gases?
What is a P-wave?
What name is given to the brittle outer layer of Earth, composed of the crust and upper mantle?
These surface waves produce zig-zag or loop-the-loop motions and cause the most damage.
These two fold types influence earthquake damage differently because one focuses seismic energy while the other diffuses it. (name both)
What are Synclines (focus) and Anticlines (diffuse)?
Which type of unconformity involves sedimentary rocks overlying igneous or metamorphic rocks?
What is a nonconformity?
What do we call the type of stress that pulls materials apart, often found at divergent boundaries?
What is extensional stress?
Where is new oceanic crust formed?
What is the mid-ocean ridge?
The principle that says any fragment found within a rock must be older than the rock containing it.
What is the Principle of Inclusions?
Sort the layers on the image below (include any unconformities)
E Nonconformity G L C H Disconformity M D J A Disconformity N K B Tilting F
What type of fossil is geographically widespread, easily recognizable, and lived for a short geological time span?
What is an index fossil?
How many seismograms are required to accurately determine the epicenter of an earthquake?
what is three?
The three ways you can make a rock melt are: Increasing temperature, increasing pressure, and _______?
What is Flux Melting?
A zone of shallow to deep earthquakes that marks a subducting plate descending into the mantle.
What is the Wadati-Benioff Zone?
The three ways to produce Magma
What are adding water, decreasing pressure, and increasing temperature?
How old is a rock sample if its parent isotope has a half-life of 1,000 years and 3 half-lives have passed?
What is 3,000 years?
We know the center of the Earth has a liquid section in it because of which wave?
S waves. Because they can't travel through liquids.
which plate tectonic type do we find the deepest hypocenters at?
What is a Convergent boundary? (oceanic-continental collision)
A gap in the rock record caused by erosion or a long period of non-deposition.
What is an Unconformity?
If a rock has a half-life of 250 years, how much time has passed when there are only 1/16th parents remaining?
What is 1000 years?