Types of Stress & Faults
Earthquakes & Seismic Waves
Volcano Types & Features
Volcano Formation & Activity
Misc.
100

This type of stress pulls rocks apart

Tension

100

These are the first seismic waves to arrive after an earthquake

P waves

100

This bowl-shaped feature forms around a volcano’s central vent

Crater

100

Molten rock beneath the Earth’s surface is called this

Magma

100

The name of the volcanic belt circling the Pacific Ocean.

Ring of Fire

200

The stress that pushes rock in opposite horizontal directions

Shearing

200

These waves arrive second and cannot travel through liquids

S waves

200

A tall, cone-shaped volcano formed from alternating lava and ash layers.

Composite/stratovolcano
200

A long tube that connects the magma chamber to the surface.

Pipe

200

This process occurs when rocks are broken down by wind, water, or biological activity without changing their chemical composition.

Physical (or mechanical) weathering

300

A break in the rock where one block slides over another

Fault

300

The point beneath Earth's surface where rock breaks, triggering an earthquake

Focus

300

This wide, gently sloping volcano forms from thin, runny lava

Shield volcano

300

Volcanic belts often form along these

Plate boundaries


300

The energy from magma heating groundwater creates this alternative energy source

Geothermal energy

400

In a normal fault, this is the rock that lies below the fault

Footwall

400

The scale currently most commonly used to measure earthquake magnitude

Moment Magnitude Scale

400

The volcanic landform left behind when a volcano’s magma hardens in its pipe

Volcanic neck

400

This volcanic feature forms from converging oceanic plates.

Island arc

400

The life stage of a volcano that might awaken again in the future

Dormant

500

This type of fault is caused by shearing and results in horizontal motion

Strike-slip fault

500

The minimum number of seismograph stations needed to locate an earthquake's epicenter.

Three

500

A volcano that is unlikely to erupt again is called this

Extinct

500

High-silica magma results in this type of eruption.

Explosive

500

This type of fault occurs when rocks are pulled apart by tension forces, causing the hanging wall to move downward relative to the footwall

Normal fault