Earth's Layers
Plate Tectonics
Earthquakes
Volcanoes
Rocks & Minerals
100

This is the solid part of Earth including rocks, minerals, and landforms.

The Geosphere

100

This ancient supercontinent existed about 225 million years ago before it broke apart.

Pangaea

100

On March 11, 2011, this country was struck by a 9.0 magnitude earthquake that triggered a massive tsunami and caused a nuclear power plant meltdown

Japan

100

When magma reaches Earth's surface, it is called this

Lava

100

This type of rock forms when sediment layers are compacted and cemented together over time. It often contains fossils.

Sedimentary rock

200

Scientists use these vibrations, sent through the planet by earthquakes, to learn what is inside Earth.

Seismic Waves

200

At this type of boundary, plates move APART and new crust forms through seafloor spreading.

A divergent boundary

200

About 80% of all earthquakes happen in this zone surrounding the Pacific Ocean.

Ring of Fire

200

Most volcanoes form at plate boundaries where this melted rock can break through the crust.

Magma

200

This type of rock is formed when existing rock is changed by heat and pressure but is NOT melted. Marble is an example.

Metamorphic Rock

300

This is the only liquid layer inside Earth. It is made of iron and nickel.

Outer Core

300

This is the process where oceanic crust sinks under a continental plate and melts back into magma.

Subduction

300

This is the place where an earthquake starts underground.

The focus

300

this chain of volcanic islands can be found in the Pacific Ocean 

Hawaiian islands

300

These types of rocks cools quickly at the surface forming tiny crystals or no crystals 

Extrusive Igneous Rocks

400

Tectonic plates float on top of this hot, semi-liquid zone in the upper mantle.

The asthenosphere

400

This is the name for the border between two tectonic plates where most of Earth's major geological events — volcanoes, earthquakes, and mountain-building — occur.

Plate Boundary

400

This instrument records seismic waves and draws a zigzag line called a seismogram.

A seismograph

400

This broad, gently sloping volcano is built from fluid lava that flows easily over large distances.

Shield Volcano

400

This type of igneous rock cools slowly underground, forming large crystals. Granite is an example.

Intrusive igneous rock

500

This type of crust is thinner (~7 km), younger, and denser than the crust found under the continents.

Oceanic crust

500

This is the name for the underwater mountain range that forms when magma fills the space between two diverging plates on the ocean floor.

Mid-Ocean Ridge

500

On the Richter scale, each increase of 1 means the earthquake is how many times stronger

10 times stronger

500

There are about this many active volcanoes on Earth

1900

500

About this many people live within the danger range of an active volcano

350,000
(350 million)

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