Advanced Earth Systems
Weather Events
Natural Disasters
Human Impact
Climate Data & Graphs
100

Name the layer of Earth that flows like a solid over geological time but allows tectonic plates to move.

asthenosphere

100

Name the weather phenomenon that forms from rotating thunderstorms with winds over 74 mph.

Tornado

100

Identify the disaster caused by sudden movement along a fault.

Earthquake

100

Name a human activity that releases greenhouse gases into the atmosphere.

Burning fossil fuels

100

Explain why a skewed rainfall dataset might affect the mean more than the median.

extreme values pull mean up or down, median is more resistant

200

Explain how convection in the mantle drives plate tectonics.

Heat from the core causes mantle rock to rise and sink, moving plates

200

Explain how El Niño affects global weather patterns.

warm Pacific water changes pressure/wind patterns, causing droughts, floods, and temperature changes worldwide

200

Explain why underwater earthquakes can create tsunamis.

sudden seafloor displacement moves water, creating massive waves

200

Explain how deforestation contributes to climate change.

fewer trees absorb CO₂, increasing atmospheric greenhouse gases

200

Describe how a moving average line can help identify long-term temperature trends in noisy climate data.

A moving average smooths short-term fluctuations to reveal the overall trend in temperature over time.

300

Identify the process that cycles water between the atmosphere, oceans, and land. 

hydrologic cycle

300

Name the tropical cyclone that forms over warm ocean water and can exceed 150 mph winds

Hurricane

300

Describe the difference between a volcanic eruption and a supervolcanic eruption.

supervolcanoes eject far more magma and gases, affecting global climate

300

Describe how urban development can worsen flooding

impermeable surfaces increase runoff, reducing absorption 

300

Explain how a standard deviation can show the variability of monthly rainfall in a city over a year.

Standard deviation measures how much each month’s rainfall differs from the average, showing consistency or variability.

400

Describe how the lithosphere interacts with the atmosphere to create mountains.

plate collision pushes up land, influencing wind and weather patterns

400

Explain how a cold front causes thunderstorms.

cold air pushes warm air upward, causing condensation and storm clouds

400

Explain how hurricanes can intensify over warm ocean currents.

warm water fuels convection and latent heat release, increasing storm strength

400

Explain the feedback loop between melting ice caps and warming

ice melts → less sunlight reflected → more warming → more ice melts

400

Describe how scientists use proxy data to study past climates.

tree rings, ice cores, and sediment cores provide clues to historical climate

500

Explain why the cryosphere affects global sea levels and climate.

ice and snow reflect sunlight and store water; melting alters sea level and temperature

500

Describe the jet stream’s effect on storm formation.

fast high-altitude winds guide storms and influence their speed/intensity

500

Identify the type of landslide triggered by heavy rain, earthquakes, or volcanic activity.

debris flow / mudslide

500

Identify the chemical reaction that produces carbon dioxide when coal burns.

C + O₂ → CO₂

500

Explain why line graphs are used for temperature trends but bar graphs for monthly rainfall.

line graphs show continuous change; bar graphs show discrete quantities

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