Earthquakes/Volcanoes
Earth Science
Tectonic Plates
Geologic Time
Earth Science
100

How many seismic stations are needed to locate an Earthquake's epicenter? (100 bonus points if you can identify the process)

What is 3, trilateration?

100

The two magma-related factors that control explosiveness.

What is silica content and water content?

100

These currents inside the mantle cause tectonic plates to move.

What are convection currents?

100

These units of geologic time are divided by major events.

What are eons, eras, periods, and epochs?

100

A fold that bends downward is called this. 100 bonus if you can name the type that bends upward.

What is a syncline?

200

Ropey lava is known by this Hawaiian name.

What is Pahoehoe?
200

List the 5 physical layers of earth. Double points if it's in order

  • What are the

  • Lithosphere

  • Asthenosphere

  • Mesosphere

  • Outer core

  • Inner core

200

New oceanic crust forms at this type of boundary.

What is a divergent boundary?

200

If layers are rock do not have inclusions/faults, we can determine which  layer is older than another based on what principle..

What is the principle of superposition?

200

If iodine-131 has a 12-day half-life, 100 g becomes 50 g in this amount of time.

What is 12 days?

300

Lava with high silica has this property, meaning it flows slowly.

What is high viscosity?

300

This point underground is where the earthquake starts.

What is the focus?

300

The Himalayas formed when this type of plate collided with the same type.

What is continental-continental convergence?

300

Which time period did the first bacteria appear in the geologic record?

What is the Pre-cambrian era?

300

A radioactive sample decaying from 100 g to 6.25 g has gone through this many half-lives.

What are 4 half-lives?

400

This scale measures damage from I–XII.

What is the Mercali scale?

400

Scientists use this method—not drilling or satellites—to study the Earth’s interior.

What is analyzing seismic waves

400

Yellowstone and Hawaii are volcanic regions caused by this feature.

What is a hot spot?

400

Principle that states a rock layer is younger than the rocks it cuts across

What are cross-cutting relationships?

400

An isotope always has the same number of protons but may differ in this.

What are neutrons?

500

Volcanoes would form on this plate in a subduction diagram.

What is the overriding plate?

500

What are the types of plate boundaries, what are the types of stress associated with each (300 bonus points if you can name the geographical feature associated with each)

What is a convergent (mountains), divergent (rift valley), and transform boundary (fault)?

What is tension, compression, and shear stress?

500

In a diagram where one plate subducts beneath another, this plate must be denser.

What is the subducting plate?

500

Name an extinction and its cause.

Ordovician - silurian - drop in sea level/glaciers

Late Devonian - Lower O2 levels in oceans due to increased plant life 

Permian - Triassic - cataclysmic eruptions

Triassic Extinction - Climate change, flood basalts, or asteroid

Cretaceous - Tertiary - Asteroid and or volcanic eruptions. 

500

What volcanic rock has high silica content, low silica content, which will lead to an explosive eruption?

Felsic Rocks like Rhyolite have high silica

Mafic Rocks like basalt have lower silica

Higher silica rocks indicate more explosiveness

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