Continental Drift
Plate Tectonics
Mountain Building
Random
Volcanoes
100

Man who first proposed that the continents are moving

Alfred Wegener

100

What is the name of the theory that combines the ideas of continental drift and seafloor spreading and is used to explain many of the the things that exist on Earth.

Plate Tectonics

100

The 2 ways mountains are formed.

Faulting & Folding

100

A __________ ________ is one where two of Earth’s plates are moving apart.

Diverging boundary 

100

Molten rock material that is released by a volcano.

Lava

200

How does the shape of the continents support the idea of continental drift?

They fit together like a big puzzle indicating they once were together.

200

Two plates with continental crust move up against each other. They crush together to form huge mountain ranges.

Convergent Boundaries 

200

When plates collided, strong forces made rocks bend and break causing 

Folds

200

Lava flows from the ridge to form new ________ ______.

Oceanic crust 

200

The two types of plate boundaries where volcanos are not found.

Transform and Convergent

300

How does the fossil record support the concept of continental drift?

As we look at older and older fossils from different continents we see them become more and more alike until we reach a point where they are identical.

300

Divergent plate boundaries form these ocean features.

Midocean ridges

300

Mountains that are formed by a series of large scale anticlines and synclines.

Folded Mountains

300

Plates slide sideways past each other. But this sliding doesn’t take place smoothly. The rocks bind and catch on each other, causing earthquakes.

Transform boundaries

300

Most volcanoes form where we find these features formed by oceanic crust.

Subduction 

400

What theory was developed and explained how the continents moved?

Seafloor spreading

400

The type of plate boundary occurs when plates slide past each other.

Transform boundaries

400

Anticline and Syncline fold which way?

A-Upwards 

S- downwards

400

These are the slowest earthquake waves and do not travel very far.

Surface or L waves

400

“floats” on the partly melted layer of the mantle below the lithosphere.

Tectonic plates

500

What is the name of the supercontinent 

What is Pangea

500

Earthquakes occur and the continental crust is pushed up to form mountains. The subducted plate melts deep underground, and the molten rock can rise to the surface, creating volcanoes.

Subduction 

500

This type of force forms normal faults.

Tension from plates moving past each other

500

These ocean waves are often triggered by earthquakes on the seafloor.

Tsunamis

500

What country/Island is made up of ocean floor that we can see today.

Iceland
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