Rock Cycle
Types of Rocks
Plate Tectonics
Plate Boundaries
Earth's Layers
100

What is the process called when rocks are broken down into smaller pieces by wind, water, or ice?

Weathering

100

Which type of rock forms from cooled lava or magma?

Igneous

100

What is the name of the theory that Earth’s outer shell is made of plates that move?

(theory of plate tectonics)

100

Which plate boundary occurs when two plates move apart?

Divergent 

100

Which layer of Earth is the solid rock layer that we live on?

The crust


200

Name the process that turns sediments into sedimentary rock by pressure and cementation.

Lithification

200

Which type of rock is formed from the compaction and cementation of sediments?

Sedimentary

200

What layer of the Earth do the tectonic plates sit on and slowly move over?

The mantle (asthenosphere)

200

Which boundary occurs when two plates move toward each other?

Convergent 


200

What is the hot, mostly solid layer beneath the crust that convects and helps move tectonic plates?

The mantle

300

What process involves rock being melted and then cooling to form a new rock?

Formation of igneous rock
300

Give one example of an igneous rock and one example of a sedimentary rock.

Granite/ Sandstone

300

Name one piece of evidence scientists use to support the theory of plate tectonics.

Evidence: matching coastlines, fossil distributions, seafloor spreading, magnetic stripes on ocean floor, earthquake/volcano patterns

300

What type of boundary involves plates sliding past each other horizontally?

Transform

300

Which of Earth's layers is liquid and is responsible for Earth's magnetic field?

The outer core

400

What term describes the continuous processes that change rocks from one type to another over time?

The rock cycle 

400

 What characteristic helps scientists identify sedimentary rocks (hint: they often contain something from once-living things)?

Fossils

400

How do the movements of tectonic plates affect the location of earthquakes and volcanoes?

They tend to occur along plate boundaries; earthquakes and volcanoes are concentrated where plates interact

400

At a convergent boundary where an oceanic plate collides with a continental plate, what commonly forms?

A trench and volcanic mountain chain (e.g., volcanic arc) often form; subduction occurs

400

Put these layers in order from the surface to the center: inner core, crust, outer core, mantle.

 Crust → Mantle → Outer core → Inner core

500

 Explain how heat and pressure can change an existing rock without melting it; what type of rock results?

Metamorphism 

500

 Describe how a rock could change from igneous to sedimentary to metamorphic in a sequence of events.

magma cools to form igneous rock → weathering and erosion produce sediments that form sedimentary rock → burial and heat/pressure transform it into metamorphic rock

500

 Explain how seafloor spreading at mid-ocean ridges provides evidence for plate tectonics.

New ocean crust forms at mid-ocean ridges and spreads outward, showing younger rocks near ridges and symmetric magnetic stripes

500

Compare and contrast the landforms or geological activity created at divergent, convergent, and transform boundaries (name one feature or event for each).

 Divergent: mid-ocean ridges and new crust; Convergent: mountain ranges, trenches, volcanic arcs, subduction; Transform: earthquakes along strike-slip faults (e.g., San Andreas Fault)

500

Explain why the inner core is solid while the outer core is liquid even though both are primarily iron.

 The inner core is solid due to immense pressure keeping iron solid despite high temperature; the outer core is liquid because pressure is lower there, allowing melting

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