Faults and Folds
Sea Floor-Spreading
Plate Boundaries
Earth's Core
Hot Spots
100

What type of fault goes with a divergent boundary?

Tension.

100

Where is the oldest part of the sea floor spreading?

The outside.

100

What plate boundary divides?

Divergent.

100

What is Earth's thinnest layer?

Crust.

100

An example of a hot spot.

Hawaii islands.

200

What type of fault goes with a convergent boundary?

Compression.

200

What causes sea floor spreading?

Convection Currents.

200

What plate boundary collides?

Convergent.

200

What layer do convection currents occur in?

The asthenosphere.

200

True or False: Hot spots are random.

True.

300

What fold has a downward fold?

Syncline.

300

Where is the youngest part of the sea floor spreading?

In the middle.

300

What plate boundary slides?

Transform.

300

What is the most dense layer?

Inner core.

300

What is a hot spot?

A hot spot is a large plume of hot mantle material rising from deep within the Earth.

400

What fault goes with the transform boundary?

Shearing.

400

What ocean is the sea floor spreading found in?

Atlantic Ocean.

400

What happens in an oceanic-oceanic boundary?

Seafloor spreading and mid-ocean ridges.

400

True or False: The lithosphere is the crust and upper mantle.

True.

400

Where do hot spots occur?

In the mantle.

500

What fold has a slope downward from the horizontal in the same direction?

Monocline.

500

When does seafloor spreading occur?

At a divergent boundary.

500

What happens at an oceanic-continental collision?

Larger earthquakes and higher volcano activity.

500

What is in the mesosphere?

The lower mantle.

500

Why do hot spots occur?

Hotspots form over exceptionally hot regions in the mantle.