Ogres Are Like Onions
Things That Hold Your Food
I Lava You, You Magma Heart Melt
Feeling Shaky
When Did We Learn THAT?
100

Which of Earth's layers is the only one that is ACTUALLY a liquid?

The outer core.

100

Mr. Mandel will display an image. What type of plate boundary is shown? 

A convergent plate boundary. 

100

Describe one feature associated with volcanoes.

Answers will vary.

100

What does the Richter Scale measure?

The Richter Scale measures the strength/magnitude of an earthquake

100

What are two types of precipitation?

Rain, sleet, hail, snow, freezing rain, etc. 

200

If you dove to the bottom of the ocean and touched the ocean floor, which of Earth's layers would you be touching?

The crust. 

200

Mr. Mandel will display an image. What type of plate boundary is shown?

It is a divergent plate boundary.

200

Most of Earths volcanoes are found in a certain area surrounding the Pacific Ocean. What is this are called? 

The Ring of Fire.

200

Mr. Mandel will display an image. What type of fault is shown? What type of stress causes this fault to occur?

It is a normal fault which is caused by tension (rocks pull apart).

200

Mr. Mandel will display an image. Which fossil is the youngest/newest?

The whale fossil is the youngest/newest.

300

Let's say a person were to travel from the crust to the core. What would happen to the heat and pressure they would experience as they traveled deeper into the Earth?

The heat they would experience would rise and the pressure would become greater the deeper they go. 

300

Describe what happens at a transform plate boundary. What natural disaster is most common at this type of plate boundary?

Two plates slide past each other at transform boundaries. Earthquakes commonly occur at transform plate boundaries.

300

Mr. Mandel will display 2 images. What type of volcano is shown? 

A shield volcano.

300

Mr. Mandel will display an image. What type of fault is shown? What type of stress causes this fault to occur?

It is a reverse fault caused by compression (rocks move together). 

300

What is a fossil?

A fossil is the preserved remains of a living organism. 

400

Molten rock in the mantle moves in a circular motion due to the heat from the core. What is this motion called?

Convection currents.

400
Explain why/how tectonic plates move. 

Convection currents in the mantle cause Earth's tectonic plates to move. Heat from the core causes the molten rock in the lower mantle to rise. When it reaches the crust it has nowhere to go so it begins to spread out. When it spreads out it cools and eventually falls back to the lower mantle. 

400

Mr. Mandel will display 2 images. What type of volcano is shown? 

A composite/stratovolcano.

400

Describe what happens before, during, and after an earthquake. 

Before an earthquake occurs their is a build up of pressure between rocks at a fault line. When the pressure becomes too great the rocks suddenly and violently rip apart and release a large amount of energy. That energy is released as seismic waves that cause the ground to shake. The shaking can cause damage/destruction to natural and man made formations

400

What happens to water during the process of evaporation?

Water heats up (absorbs energy) and changes from a liquid to a gas.

500
Explain why the inner core is a solid. 

The inner core is a solid because it experiences an extreme amount of pressure at all times. That pressure keeps the atoms of the inner core compacted tightly together.  

500

What is subduction? What type of boundary does it occur at? Why does oceanic crust subduct beneath continental crust?

Subduction occurs at convergent plate boundaries where one plate is forced beneath another plate and sinks into the mantle. Oceanic crust is forced to subduct beneath continental crust because it is thinner and more dense. 

500

What are the three classifications of volcanoes (based on activity)?

Active - volcanoes that are erupting currently or have erupted in the recent past and will likely erupt some time in the future.

Dormant - volcanoes that are not erupting, have not erupted in the recent past but still have a potential to erupt in the future.

Extinct - volcanoes that have not erupted in the recent past and do not have magma contained inside them. It is highly unlikely they will erupt ever again. 

500
What process do seismologists use to determine the epicenter of an earthquake? Describe it.  
Seismologists use a process called triangulation. Three seismographs in different locations measure the distance to the epicenter. On a map three circles are drawn using the distances calculated as their radii. The point where all three circles intersect is the epicenter.
500

Describe how metamorphic rock could become an igneous rock. 

If a metamorphic rock melts into magma or lava and then that magma or lava cools and hardens it will become an igneous rock