Layers
Plate Boundaries
Volcanoes
Earthquakes
Waves
100

This layer is between 5-50 km thick.

What is the crust?

100

This plate boundary occurs when two plates move apart.

What is a divergent boundary?

100

This volcano is generally small with steep sides.

What is a cinder-cone volcano?

100

This is the point where an earthquake originates, usually several km below Earth's surface.

What is a focus?

100

This instrument is used to measure horizontal or vertical motion during an Earthquake.

What is a seismometer?
200

This layer is made  up of liquid iron.  It creates the Earth's magnetic field.

What is the outer core?

200

This boundary is where most Earthquake's occur.

What is a transform boundary?

200

This is the cause of volcanoes far from plate boundaries, such as Hawaii.

What is a hot spot?

200

This scale measures energy released.  It takes into account fault size, movement and rock stiffness.

What is the moment magnitude scale?

200

This type of wave travels along Earth's surface.

What is a surface wave?

300

This layer is hot, dense, asphalt like layer of rock that flows causing the plates to move.

What is the mantle?

300
Continental volcanic mountains are a product of this type of convergent boundary.

What is oceanic-continental convergent boundary?

300

This type of volcano is the least explosive, its magma flows slowly.

What is a shield volcano?

300

These are the three ways that the depth of an earthquake's focus be classified.  

What are shallow, intermediate and deep?

300

This is a record produced that can be used to find the epicenter of an earthquake.

What is a seismogram?

400

This layer is the hottest part of Earth and is a solid ball.

What is the inner core?

400

This is the cause of what moves the plates, where thermal energy causes material to expand and become less dense.  

What is convection current?

400

This volcano is the one built by alternating layers of lava flows, volcanic ash, cinders and bombs.

What is a composite volcano?

400
This scale measures the energy released by the earthquake by measuring the amplitude (height) of the wave.

What is the Richter scale.

400

This is the wave that moves up and down, and is unable to travel through liquid.

What is a S-wave?

500

This includes two layers that is involved in plates that move.

What is the lithosphere?

500

Oceanic-Oceanic convergent boundaries give result to this.

What is an ocean trench?

500

These are the factors that affect the formation of magma.

What is temperature, pressure & water.

500

Narrow ones of these is where most of the world's earthquakes occur.  

What is a seismic belt?

500

These waves squeeze & pull rocks in the same direction as the waves.

What is a p-wave?