W, E, or D?
Rock Characteristics
The Rock Cycle Diagram
Types of Rocks
100

Describe the difference between weathering, erosion, and deposition?

Weathering - breakdown of rock

Erosion - movement of rock

Deposition - dropping of rock

100

If you observe layers, what type of rock are you likely looking at?

sedimentary (metamorphic would be BANDS/FOLIATION)

100

What are the 3 classes of rock?

igneous, metamorphic, sedimentary

100

If a rock with layers undergoes heat and pressure, then it will become what type of rock?

A metamorphic rock

200

The image below shows a piece of the Earth's crust. The formation of rock fragments was likely a result of which process?

weathering

200

This feature may be seen in metamorphic rocks

Bands/Foliation

200

What process is required to create sediments?

Weathering and erosion

200

How do sedimentary rocks form?

sediments are compacted or cemented together

300

Below are before and after pictures of an island. Explain what process formed the feature highlighted in red, and explain how you know.

Erosion - the sediments (sand) are gone now and have been moved, water has taken its place.

300

Refer to google doc (which is a mineral, which is a rock?)

Object A = rock (mixture of different things)

Object B = mineral (only one substance/uniform composition)

300

Magma becomes ______________ through solidification. What is solidification? Fill in the blank, then describe what solidification is.

Igneous rock - solidification is when magma cools off, and becomes a solid instead of a liquid

300

What are the 2 types of igneous rock?

intrusive and extrusive

400

see question on google docs

waves will erode the arch over time making it smaller

400

List 2 observations you see in the rock below, and then infer what type of rock you are probably looking at BASED ON THOSE OBSERVATIONS.

1) layers

2) shells/fossils

Sedimentary rock

400

Describe ALL the steps and stages necessary for a sedimentary rock to become an igneous rock

First it will have to melt into magma, then solidify into an igneous rock.

400

How can you tell apart an intrusive igneous rock from an extrusive igneous rock? How did each form?

Intrusive - forms in the earth, undergound

Extrusive - forms outside the earth, above ground

500

* see doc for image

Observe the changes between stage 1 to stage 2. What process is this, and how do you know?


Observe the changes between stage 3 and stage 4. What process is this, and how do you know?

Stage 1 to 2 = deposition, because new layers were dropped on top of original ones


Stage 3 to 4 = erosion, the top layer was moved and is in a new location (no longer there). 

500

One igneous rock has vesicles, the other igneous rock has crystals. Though both rocks are igneous rocks, they have different characteristics. Explain why. 

The one with vesicles likely cooled above ground and cooled quickly. The one with crystals likely cooled below ground and cooled slowly.

500

List ALL the steps and stages that would have to occur in order for a metamorphic rock to become a sedimentary rock.

The rock must become weathered and eroded into sediments. Then, sediments must be buried, deposited, compacted, and cemented into sedimentary rock.
500

Using the diagram below, describe which letter would have each type of rock (metamorphic, intrusive igneous, extrusive igneous, and sedimentary) located there, and how you know.

A = extrusive igneous (top of volcano, not underground)

B = intrusive igneous (inside earth, underground by volcano)

C= sedimentary (exposed to wind, water)

D = metamorphic (close to center of earth which is hot, has weight on top of it)

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