Vocabulary
It's All Relative
Changing Layers
Fossil Madness
#Throwback
100

Define the word "extinct"

An animal or plant that is dead and has no living members remaining

100

Suzy's class lined up in order from youngest to oldest. Suzy was at the front of the line. Suzy said that she had to be younger than anyone else in the class, but she did not actually know everyone's age. What skill was Suzy using when she made this claim?

Relative Age

100

One thing that can cause a change in rock layers is a violent shaking of the Earth that comes when two of Earth's plates shift quickly. What do we call this natural disaster where the Earth shakes violently?

Earthquake

100

What is a fossil?

The hard remains of a once living animal.

100

Name one step in the Engineering Design Process.

Ask

Imagine

Plan

Create

Improve

Communicate

200

Define the word fossil.

The hard remains of a once living thing.

200

Where would we find the oldest rock layer?

Closest to the bottom of a rock formation.
200

If a river flows in the same location for millions of years, it can start to carve the rock layers out. What do we call this new formation that is created when the water carves out the rock layers?

(Hint: there is a Grand one in our country)

Canyon

200

We learned about two types of fossils, named for where the animal most likely lived. What were those two types of fossils?

Aquatic and Terrestrial.

200

What is the definition of the word "energy" in science?

The ability to cause change.

300

Define the word "relative age".

When you compare the ages of two items without using their actual true age.

300

Where would we usually find the newest rock layer?

Closest to the surface.

300

One thing that can cause changes to rock layers is pressure. This pressure comes when giant, underground pieces of our Earth shift and move. What do we call these massive chunks of land that are always moving?

Plates

300
What is one thing you might look for to prove that a fossil is aquatic?

Fins, flippers, gills, etc.

300

Name the four parts of a wave.

Crest

Trough

Amplitude

Wavelength

400

Define the word "aquatic".

An animal or plant which lives in the water.

400

Take a look at the rock layers on the board. Which layer is the oldest? How do you know?

Sandstone. It is the closest to the bottom.

400

Take a look at the picture on the board. What most likely caused the rock layer to change like that?

Earthquake, because of the split between the two layers.

400

What is a feature you might look for to prove a fossil is terrestrial?

Hooves, feet, legs, fur, etc.

400

Plants and flowers produce a special powder to help them reproduce. This powder gets carried between plants on bugs, especially bees. What is the name of this special powder?

pollen

500

Define the word "terrestrial".

An animal or plant that lives mainly on the land.

500

Explain how we know a rock layer is older if it is further from the surface?

If the rock layer has been around a long time, it would have been covered up and buried by many other younger rock layers over the years.

500

There are three main ways rock layers can change that we talked about. Name one.

Earthquakes

Heat and Pressure

Water

500

Take a look at the picture on the board. Notice the fossils in each layer of this rock formation. What do these fossils tell us about the way the environment has changed over time?

The environment has changed from aquatic to terrestrial, based on the fossils

500

What are the four steps of Erosion?

Weathering

Sediment

Erosion

Deposition