Properties of Matter
Earth & Space
Changes to the Land
Fossil Fuels
Energy, Force & Motion
100

What are the three common states of matter you can see every day?

Solids, liquids, gases

100

 What causes day and night on Earth?

Earth Rotation on its Axis

100

Define Weathering

Breaking down of rock into smaller pieces.

100

Name three common types of fossil fuels.

Coal, Oil ( Petroleum), Natural Gas

100

What is energy?

The ability to do work or cause change.

200

What property describes whether an object can sink or float?

Density

200

What causes the length and direction of shadows to change during the day?

 Sun’s position changes angle as Earth rotates. The sun doesn't move but since the earth rotates it changes throughout the day.

200

What is Erosion?

Movement of weathered rock or soil by wind, water, or ice.

200

Where do fossil fuels come from?

From ancient buried plants and animals that were altered over millions of years.

200

What is a force?

A push or a pull

300

What Property of Matter determines how much space an object takes up?

Volume ( mL.)

300

Why do we have the pattern of seasons?

The earth revolves ( orbits around the sun) the position of earth dictates the season we experience.

300

What is Deposition, Give an example.

Deposition is dropping of sediment; example: sand forming a beach.

300

Briefly describe the general process that turns ancient plant and animal matter into fossil fuels

 Buried organic material is heated and compressed over long time, forming fossil fuels.

300

 Explain how light energy from the Sun becomes energy stored in plants

It becomes photosynthesis

400

Explain how the particles are arranged in a solid versus a gas.

Solids: particles packed tightly, vibrate in place. Gases: particles far apart, move freely.

400

Name the 4 seasons, and describe what happens to our days.

Winter- Shortest amount of daylight hours

Spring- amount of time we get sunlight starts to increase

Summer- Longest daylight hours

Fall- Amount of daylight hours decrease

400

What is the difference between compaction & Cementation

 Compaction squeezes sediments together; cementation glues them into rock.

400

Compare coal and natural gas in how they are formed and one difference in how they are used.

Coal forms mainly from plant material in swamps; natural gas forms from microscopic organisms and plant/animal matter under higher heat; coal is often burned for electricity, gas for heating/cooking.

400

 What does it mean if forces on an object add up to zero, or there is no change in the position of an object?

Forces acting on the object are balanced

500

1 spoon and 1 bag of 10 wooden blocks are dropped into water. One sinks and the other one floats. Which did what and why?

Spoon sinks bag of blocks float because of density. Even if there are less spoons than blocks, the spoon is made of metal which has greater density than water.

500

 How does the moon’s orbit around Earth relate to the pattern of moon phases?

Moon orbits Earth causing phases as different portions are lit from our view.

500

Give a real-world example that shows how weathering, erosion, and deposition work together to change a coastline or riverbank.

 Example: River erodes banks upstream, carries sediment, deposits it where the water slows, changing the coastline over time.

500

 Name one reason burning fossil fuels affects Earth’s atmosphere.

Burning fossil fuels releases carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas that can warm the atmosphere

500

 Describe how contact forces and non-contact forces are different; give one example of each.

 Contact force: friction (touching surfaces). Non-contact force: gravity or magnetism (act at a distance).