Earth’s Structure & Plate Tectonics
Natural Hazards & Disasters
Climate Change & Atmospheric Science
Human Impacts & Sustainability
Earth Resources & Geological Time
100

This layer of the Earth is solid, brittle, and divided into tectonic plates.

Lithosphere

100

A sudden shaking of the ground caused by movement along a fault.

Earthquake

100

The trapping of heat by gases in Earth’s atmosphere is known as this effect.

Greenhouse effect

100

The process of clearing forests for agriculture or urban development.

Deforestation

100

Fossil fuels like coal, oil, and gas are classified as this type of resource.

Non-renewable

200

The boundary where two plates move apart, creating new crust, is called this.

Divergent boundary

200

This natural hazard occurs when hot ash, gas, and rock flow rapidly down a volcano’s slope.

Pyroclastic flow

200

This gas, produced by burning fossil fuels, is the largest contributor to global warming.

Carbon dioxide (CO₂)

200

The overuse of groundwater that causes sinking of land surfaces.

Subsidence

200

The process where sediments are compacted and cemented into rock.

Lithification

300

The driving force behind plate tectonics is thought to be convection currents in this layer.

Asthenosphere / Upper mantle

300

A tropical storm with winds exceeding 119 km/h is called this.

Cyclone / Hurricane / Typhoon

300

The layer of the atmosphere where weather occurs.

Troposphere

300

This renewable energy source uses moving water to generate electricity.

Hydropower

300

The time it takes for half of a radioactive isotope to decay.

Half-life

400

This boundary type creates deep ocean trenches and volcanic arcs when one plate sinks beneath another.

Convergent boundary / Subduction zone

400

A giant ocean wave caused by an undersea earthquake or landslide.

Tsunami

400

These natural records, extracted from glaciers, provide evidence of past atmospheric CO₂ levels.

Ice cores

400

The term for species introduced to ecosystems where they outcompete native organisms.

Invasive species

400

Rocks formed from cooling and solidification of magma or lava.

Igneous rocks

500

The theory that explains the movement of continents over geological time.

Plate tectonics

500

This scale measures earthquake magnitude based on seismic energy released.

Moment Magnitude Scale (formerly Richter)

500

The large-scale warming of ocean waters in the Pacific that disrupts global weather patterns.

El Niño

500

The layer of Earth’s atmosphere that absorbs most harmful UV radiation.

Ozone layer

500

These boundaries between rock layers represent gaps in the geological record.

Unconformities

600

The San Andreas Fault in California is an example of this type of plate boundary.

Transform boundary

600

The ring-shaped region around the Pacific Ocean known for frequent earthquakes and volcanoes.

Ring of Fire

600

This international agreement, adopted in 2015, aims to limit global warming to below 2°C.

Paris Agreement

600

Excessive nutrient runoff into rivers and lakes can lead to this oxygen-depleting process.

Eutrophication

600

The largest mass extinction in Earth’s history, about 252 million years ago.

Permian-Triassic extinction

700

When two continental plates collide, they form these large-scale features.

Fold mountains (e.g., Himalayas)

700

This process can trigger landslides by weakening slopes through water saturation.

Heavy rainfall / Overland flow

700

Methane is a potent greenhouse gas. Its main natural source is this.

Wetlands/Swamps

700

The 1987 agreement to phase out ozone-depleting substances like CFCs.

Montreal Protocol

700

The boundary between the Cretaceous and Paleogene periods is marked by this element from an asteroid impact.

Iridium

800

The point on the Earth’s surface directly above an earthquake’s focus is called this.

Epicenter

800

Volcanic eruptions can cool global temperatures due to the release of this substance into the stratosphere.

Sulfur dioxide

800

The fraction of incoming sunlight reflected by a surface, influencing climate, is called this.

Albedo

800

The measure of how much biologically productive land and water an individual or population requires.

Ecological footprint

800

The geologic time scale is divided into these four main eons.

Hadean, Archean, Proterozoic, Phanerozoic

900

Magnetic evidence from the ocean floor helped confirm plate tectonics because of these symmetrical patterns.

Magnetic striping / Paleomagnetism

900

The name of the most explosive type of volcanic eruption, producing high ash columns.

Plinian eruption

900

The tipping point where melting ice reduces reflectivity and accelerates warming is called this.

Ice-albedo feedback

900

Sustainable farming technique that rotates crops to improve soil fertility.

Crop rotation

900

The process where minerals replace organic material in forming fossils.

Permineralization

1000

The supercontinent that existed around 250 million years ago before breaking apart.

Pangaea

1000

In 1883, this Indonesian volcano’s eruption caused global climate impacts and massive tsunamis.

Krakatoa

1000

The sudden global cooling event that followed the Chicxulub asteroid impact 66 million years ago.

Impact/Global winter

1000

The concept of using resources without compromising future generations’ ability to meet their needs.

Sustainable development

1000

The current geological epoch, defined by significant human impact on Earth’s systems.

Anthropocene