Plate Boundaries
Natural Hazards
Rock Cycle
Weathering and Erosion
Continental Drift and Graphs
100

Plate Boundary that collides

What is Convergent Boundary 

100

Created by an underwater earthquake

What is a tsunami 

100

Cooling of magma

What is an igneous Rock?

100

The breaking down of rock. 

What is weathering?
100

What is the scientist who gave us the theory of continental drift?

Alfred Wegener

200

Moving in a different directions 

What is a divergent plate boundary 

200

These two natural hazards can be found on the Ring of Fire. 

What are earthquakes and volcanoes
200

Formed from heat and pressure.

What is a metamorphic rock?

200

True or False: Erosion is breaking down rocks, and weathering is moving them. 

Flase

200

Which natural hazard caused the most damages to schools?

Storms

300

What is a transform boundary

300

Near the equator and requires high winds and warm water temperatures

What are hurricanes?

300

Magma is ______ underground. 

Lava

300

Plants growing under rocks and breaking them apart is what type of weathering? 

Biological weathering

400

This geological process can form volcanoes at convergent plate boundaruies 

What is a subduction zone

400

Quick movement of land down hills and mountains 

What is a landslide?

400
Weathering and erosion create this small item before forming sedimentary rocks. 

What are sediments?

400

Erosion is the process of ____...

Rocks moving
400

What is the force that is moving the plates away from each other that supports Alfred Wegeners theory?

What is Convection currents

500

Divergent boundaries at ocean floors create this geological process that proves Alfred Wegener was correct about continental drift. 

What is Seafloor Spreading

500
Frequent drought and dry vegetation can lead to this natural hazard. 

What are wildfires? 

500

Sedimentary rocks need these two processes to form. 

What is compaction and cementation? 

500

Feldspar minerals in granite react with water over thousands of years, turning into soft clay. The once-hard rock becomes crumbly and weak. 

Is this a fast or slow process?

Is it large or small scale?

Is it mechanical or chemical weathering?

Slow

Small 

Chemical

500

Which natural hazard did the most damage overall

Floods

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