This volcano has a gentle slope, is nonexplosive, and the lava is runny and spreads over a wide area.
These waves only travel through solids and cannot travel through liquids.
This is the scientist who thought of Pangaea (the idea of all the continents being once joined in a single huge continent).
Bonus: The hypothesis of continents once formed a single landmass, broke up, and drifted to their present locations. +100
Bonus: What is the Continental Drift?
These are the first waves of an earthquake to be detected and are the fastest type of seismic waves.
This is the theory of when younger rocks lie above older rocks if the layers have not been disturbed.
Bonus: This is a break in the Earth's crust along which blocks of rock slide relative to one another. +100
Bonus: What is Faulting?
The process by which new oceanic lithosphere forms as magma rises toward the surface and solidifies.
This is a body of molten rock deep underground that feeds a volcano.
These are the slowest waves, but they do the most damage and destruction; often associated with earthquakes.
This time includes the Proterozoic Eon, Archean Eon, and the Hadean Eon.
This is a chain of underwater mountains that runs through the center of the Atlantic Ocean and where sea floor spreading takes place.
This is how lava flows and affects the surface of lava in different ways.
Bonus: This is a type of lava that has a high viscosity and flows slowly (wax and glassy). +100
Bonus: Pahoehoe
When locating an earthquake, this is the point on the Earth's surface directly above an earthquake's starting point.
Bonus: This is the point inside the Earth where an earthquake begins. +100Bonus: What is the focus point?
This layer of the mantle is very rocky and solid and is the upper layer (closest to the crust).
Bonus: This era is the era of mammals and the current era we live in.
Bonus: What is the Cenozoic Era?
When a plate with oceanic crust collides with a plate with continental crust, and the oceanic crust sinks into the asthenosphere.