Plate Tectonics
Plate Tectonics
Volcanoes
Earthquakes
Earthquakes
100

New sea floor forms as magma rises to Earth's surface and solidifies at a mid-ocean ridge

sea-floor spreading

100

How does the fossil record support the continental drift theory?

Fossils of the same type are found on continents that were once together.

100

When Kilauea in Hawaii erupts the lava often covers a large area and ends up in the ocean. This is an example of a/an

non-explosive eruption

100

What is an earthquake?

the shaking or trembling caused by the sudden release of energy

100

Seismic sea wave that is sometimes created when an earthquake starts on the ocean floor.

tsunami

200

What do the stripes in the sea floor illustrate?

The magnetic field has not always pointed North

200

What is the main idea Alfred Wegner proposed in the “Theory of Continental Drift” that he published in 1915?

The continents were once a single landmass that drifted apart.

200

Two materials from an explosive eruption are

pyroclastic materials and ash

200

What is the focus of an earthquake?

place underground where the rocks break producing vibrations

200

When a slope of earth becomes unstable?

landslide

300

What observation did Alfred Wegener make that led him to develop the theory of continental drift?

Continents appear to have once fit together.

300

How does Earth’s geologic record support the continental drift theory?

Continents are all made from the same three types of rock.

300

What is a volcano?

Areas of earth’s surface through which magma and volcanic gases pass

300

Pulling or stretching force creates what type of fault?

extension force

300

What should you do during an earthquake?

drop, cover, and hold on

400

Scientists knew that Earth was not getting bigger as new crust was formed at the ridges. What did the discovery of oceanic trenches help scientists understand?

That the crust could be created and destroyed.

400

How did the discovery of sea-floor ridges affect the ability of the scientific community to accept Alfred Wegener’s ideas?

The ridges helped to explain plate movement.

400

Mt St. Helens erupted in 1980.  What type of volcano is Mt. St. Helens?

composite

400

Pushing something together creates what type of fault

reverse fault

400

How much stronger is an earthquake with a magnitude of 4 than an earthquake with a magnitude of 2?

100 times

500

How did Wegener explain rainforest fossils that are now found in arid or cold regions of Earth?

The land they are on was once closer to the equator.

500

Magma from the mantle rises to the surface, cool and forms new oceanic lithosphere at what boundary?

divergent

500

Which type of volcano forms when the magma chamber empties and its roof collapses?  It often fills with water.

caldera

500

What measures the amplitude of the waves from an earthquake?

Richter scale

500

What is the epicenter of an earthquake?

the point of Earth’s surface directly above the earthquake’s focus

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