History ish
Theory
Geography
Chemistry
Other
100

4.54 billion years

what is the estimated age of the earth

100

processes operating on Earth today have operated on Earth in the past. The Laws of Nature have not changed over Geologic Time

What is the Principle of Uniformitarianism

100

The major tectonic plates

Where is, North American, South American, Pacific, Australian, Eurasian, African, Antarctic

100

The common elements in oceanic crust

 Iron and magnesium

100

The three types of plate interactions you would see along convergent plate boundaries

Oceanic-Continental convergence; the denser oceanic plate subducts under the continental plate. Oceanic-Oceanic Convergence; The older denser oceanic plate subducts under the younger one. Continental-Continental convergence; neither subducts but crumbles

200

12-14 billion years

what is the theorized age of the universe

200

Catastrophic vs Gradual changes

What is Instantaneous changes  vs changes that are not perceptible over a human lifetime give example of each for a bonus 200 points

200

The ring of fire

What is a zone of frequent earthquakes and volcanoes that surrounds the Pacific Ocean due to tectonic plate boundaries and subduction

200

Define a mineral

An inorganic, naturally occurring, crystalline structure with a unique arrangement of atoms and a specific chemical composition

200

Lithosphere vs asthenosphere

 The lithosphere is the rigid outer layer broken into tectonic plates, while the asthenosphere is the hot, soft layer beneath it that allows the plates to move

300

theory of continental drift

Apparent fit of the continents, fossil correlation, rock and mountain correlation, and paleoclimate data

300

The Theory of Seafloor Spreading/ Tectonic plate theory evidence

Seafloor spreading showed that new ocean crust forms at mid-ocean ridges and moves outward, providing the mechanism that explained how tectonic plates move

300

Mechanisms that move tectonic plates

Ridge push, Slab pull, and Mantle convection

300

The continental crust is mostly made of what elements? For this reason, continental crust is mostly felsic or mafic in texture

What is Silicon, Oxygen, and Aluminum. Its mainly felsic

300

The major types of plate boundaries

Convergent boundaries form mountains, volcanoes, and trenches as plates collide; divergent boundaries form mid-ocean ridges and new crust as plates separate; transform boundaries cause earthquakes as plates slide past each other. Bonus 300 points, describe them

400

What are the most common rock-forming minerals

Quartz, Feldspar, Plagioclase Feldspar, Orthoclase Feldspar, Mica, Amphibole, Pyroxene, Olivine

400

How is subduction

The connection between the crusts because the oceanic crust is more dense while the continental is less dense

400

Types of metamorphism

The main types of metamorphism are contact (heat from magma), regional (heat and pressure during mountain building), dynamic (pressure along faults), and hydrothermal

400

Igneous rocks are defined by composition (mafic and felsic) and texture (aphanitic and phaneritic). What do these terms mean

 Mafic and felsic describe magma composition (dark, iron/magnesium-rich vs light, silica-rich), while aphanitic and phaneritic describe crystal size based on cooling speed (small crystals from fast cooling vs large crystals from slow cooling) and are either intrusive (slow-cooling magma underground with large crystals) or extrusive (fast-cooling lava at the surface with small or glassy crystals), and their color and texture tell you the magma’s composition and cooling history

400

Foliated and nonfoliated metamorphic rocks

 Foliated metamorphic rocks have layered or banded textures caused by directed pressure, while nonfoliated rocks lack layers and form under equal pressure, often from contact metamorphism

500

the coal sequence and sedimentary rocks classification

Coal forms from plant material buried and transformed over time. As heat and pressure increase, it changes through stages. It's called Anthracite. Before coal it starts as Peat and then becomes lignite and finally Bitumous coal. You classify them by Formation/Process, Composition, and Grain size

500

Tests/characteristics that you can use to differentiate minerals

Color, Streak, Luster, Hardness, Cleavage vs Fracture, Density, Crystal shape, Special properties

500

triple junctions and hot spots

Triple junctions are locations where three plate boundaries meet, while hot spots are stationary mantle plumes that create volcanic chains as tectonic plates move over them

500

What is Bowen’s Reaction Series

Bowen’s Reaction Series shows the sequence in which minerals crystallize from magma as it cools, from high-temperature mafic minerals to low-temperature felsic minerals

500

Foliation is the alignment of minerals- what causes it

Foliation is caused by directed pressure during metamorphism, which forces minerals to realign the intensity of heat and pressure a rock experienced during metamorphism

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