Plate Tectonics
Volcanic Activity
Earthquakes
Mountain Building
Random
100

This is the name of Wegener's hypothesis.

What is continental drift?

100

The internal resistance to flow.

What is viscosity?

100
Reverse fault, normal fault, and this make up the three types of faults in the Earth's crust.

What is strike-slip fault?

100

The displacement of the mantle by Earth's continental and oceanic crust is a condition of equilibrium referred to as this.

What is isostasy?

100

Greek word meaning "all the earth" that was used as the name for the supercontinent that existed 200 million years ago.

What is Pangaea?
200

The way these two continents appear to fit like puzzle pieces on a map led people to suggest that the continents had drifted over time.

What are South America and Africa?

200

A mushroom-shaped pluton with a round top and flat bottom.

What is a laccolith?

200

The point at which an earthquake originates.

What is the focus?

200

The slow process of the crust's rising as the result of the removal of overlying material.

What is isostatic rebound?

200

Sections of active faults that haven't experienced significant earthquakes for a long period of time.

What are seismic gaps?

300

This is the study of Earth's magnetic field over time.

What is paleomagnetism?

300

These large depressions can be up to 50 km in diameter and can form when the summit or side of a volcano collapses into the magma chamber that once fueled the volcano.

What are calderas?

300

The record produced by a seismometer.

What is a seismogram?

300

This process forms all mountain ranges.

What is orogeny?

300

Rapidly moving volcanic material that can travel at speeds of nearly 200 km/h and may contain hot, poisonous gases.

What is pyroclastic flow?

400

A line on a map that connects points that have the same age.

What is an isochron?

400

A mountain with broad, gently sloping sides and a nearly circular base.

What is a shield volcano?

400

The absence of this wave type allowed seismologists to reason that the Earth's outer core must be liquid.

What are S-waves?

400

This can form as magma is pushed up through dikes and erupts onto the seafloor.

What are pillow basalts?

400
A way of measuring earthquake magnitude, taking into account the size of the fault rupture, the amount of movment along the fault, and the rocks' stiffness.

What is the moment magnitude scale?

500

This is the process in which the weight of a subducting plate helps pull the trailing lithosphere into a subduction zone.

What is slab pull?

500

The slopes of a composite volcano are composed of layers of this and lava.

What is tephra?

500

This highly destructive force can be caused by a large earthquake occurring on the ocean floor.

What is a tsunami?

500

These mountains form when large pieces of crust are tilted, uplifted, or dropped downward between large faults.

What are fault-block mountains?

500

Intrusive igneous rock bodies that can be exposed at Earth's surface as a result of uplift and erosion and are classified based on their size, shape, and relationship to surrounding rocks.

What is a pluton?