Rocks and Minerals
W.E.D.S.
Plate Tectonics & Paleontology
Natural Resources 1
Natural Resources 2
100

This naturally occurring, nonliving solid with a definite chemical composition is the basic building block of rocks.

What is a mineral?

100

This process breaks rocks into smaller pieces without moving them.

What is weathering?

100

This is the thinnest and coolest layer of Earth and includes the continents and ocean floor.

What is the crust?

100

Materials that occur in nature and are used by humans are called these.

What are natural resources?

100

Gases such as carbon dioxide and methane that trap heat in the atmosphere are called these.

What are greenhouse gases?

200

This property of a mineral is tested by scratching it to see if it can scratch another mineral.

What is hardness?

200

Water, wind, ice, and gravity are examples of these forces that move sediment.

What are agents of erosion?

200

This movement of heat in the mantle causes tectonic plates to move.

What are convection currents?

200

Wind, solar, and hydroelectric power are examples of this type of energy resource.

What are renewable resources?

200

Scientists use temperature data over time to show this trend occurring on Earth.

What is global warming?

300

The color of a mineral’s powder left behind when it is rubbed on a plate shows this property.

What is streak?

300

This type of weathering occurs when ice freezes in cracks, expands, and breaks rock apart.

What is mechanical (physical) weathering?

300

This type of plate boundary forms when two plates move away from each other, often creating new crust.

What is a divergent boundary?

300

Coal, oil, and natural gas are examples of this type of energy resource that cannot be replaced quickly.

What are nonrenewable resources?

300

Burning fossil fuels contributes to increased levels of this gas in the atmosphere.

What is carbon dioxide?

400

Rocks formed from compacted and cemented sediments are classified as this type of rock.

What are sedimentary rocks?

400

Sediment dropped by moving water forms land features in these environments, such as deltas and beaches.

What are environments of deposition?

400

Fossils found on different continents help scientists support claims about changes in Earth’s surface and this factor.

What is climate?

400

This renewable resource uses heat from inside Earth to generate energy.

What is geothermal energy?

400

Protecting water, soil, and air for future generations is an example of this practice.

What is conservation (or sustainability)?

500

This model explains how igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic rocks change over time through weathering, erosion, heat, and pressure.

What is the rock cycle?

500

Soil forms as a result of weathered rock layers mixed with decomposed organic material, also known as this.

What is humus?

500

Scientists use radioactive dating, rock layers, and meteorites to determine this major scientific conclusion.

What is the age of Earth?

500

This nonrenewable resource uses uranium and produces energy through nuclear reactions rather than combustion.

What is nuclear energy?

500

Using evidence from graphs and maps, scientists argue that human activity has contributed to this environmental change.

What is the rise in global temperatures over the past century?