Todd Test 7,9, And 20
Wells
A hole drilled into the zone of saturation for the purpose of extracting water
What river has the largest watershed in the United States?
Mississippi river
Which of the following locations would most likely have the highest rate of physical weathering?
New York
How does stream capture, or stream piracy occur?
Sometimes, a stream erodes its way through the high area separating two drainage basins, joins the other stream, and then draws away its water.
Which of the following is found in acid precipitation?
Sulfuric acid
What is the source of the energy that drives the water cycle?
The sun
Which of the following is not true about S-waves?
They generally cause vertical movement
Deltas are
Triangular
Eutrophication causes dissolved oxygen levels to decrease.
True
Loose soil absorbs water more efficiently than packed soil.
True
Sedimentary rocks are more easily weathered than igneous rocks
True
The Grand Canyon is a V-shaped channel.
True
All the land area that drains into a
Watershed
mechanical weathering results in
a change in a rock's size and shape
Chemical weathering results in
a change in the composition of a rock
Permeability
a material's ability to release water
Earthquake magnitude is
a measure of the energy released during a quake and can be measured on the Richter scale
A stream's load is
all the material the stream carries
A seismometer has a frame that is
anchored to the ground and a suspended mass
A wetland that is not stream-fed and receives its water from precipitation is called a ____.
bog
The process of weathering
breaks down Earth materials
A floodplain is a
broad, flat area that extends out from a stream's bank during times of flooding
In chemical weathering, chemical reactions between rocks and water result in the formation of new minerals and the release of dissolved substances. The new minerals have ___ properties from those of the original rocks
different
Elevated land areas called
divides separate one watershed from another
Alluvial fans are ___ shaped
fan
Aquitard
formed by impermeable materials that create a zone of saturation above it
Spring
groundwater that emerges naturally from the ground surface
Water from precipitation gathers in
gullies
Seismic gaps are places along an active fault that
haven't experienced significant earthquakes for a long period of time
Reverse faults form as a result of
horizontal compression
Geyser
hot spring that shoots water up from the ground periodically
Wetlands are
low-lying areas that are periodically saturated with water and support specific plant species
Which measurement scale would the depth of an earthquake's focus most affect?
modified Mercalli
Which type of fault extends the crust?
normal
Eutrophication occurs in a lake when
nutrients from fertilizers, detergents, or sewage are added
Zone of Saturation
open spaces in the soil fill with water (groundwater) that can be extracted by wells
A magnitude 6 on the Richter scale represents how much more energy than a magnitude 5?
over 1000 X
Aquifer
permeable layers that allow water to flow freely through
Groundwater is replenished mostly by
rain
Seismic waves are
reflected and refracted as they strike different materials
Soil is residual or transported. Residual soil
remains on top of its parent bedrock
S-waves cause rocks to move at
right angles to the direction of the waves
P-waves squeeze and pull rocks in the
same direction along which the waves travel
Most earthquakes occur in areas associated with plate boundaries called
seismic belts
Alluvial fans and deltas form when
stream velocity decreases and sediment is deposited
Porosity
the amount of water that can be stored in the pore spaces in the rock or sediments
Belt of Soil Moisture
water that covers the top of the soil
___ wedging is usually responsible for the formation of potholes in roads
Frost
___ is the driving force behind all agents of erosion
Gravity
Water that soaks into the ground after rain
Ground Water
How does mechanical weathering help increase chemical weathering?
Mechanical weathering breaks up rock into smaller pieces which increase the surface area of the material. This means that more surface area is available for chemical weathering
Intensity is a measure of the damage caused by a quake and is measured with the modified
Mercalli scale
major factors in the process of mechanical weathering
Temperature and pressure
____ soil is moved to a location away from its parent bedrock by water, wind, or a glacier
Transported
Zone of Aeration
area above the water table that contains air in between soil particles
Wetlands include
bogs, marshes, and swamps
Water Table
boundary between the zone of aeration and zone of saturation
If S-waves arrive at a seismic station 6 minutes after the P-waves arrived, what is the epicentral distance?
4500km
How does elastic deformation differ from ductile deformation?
Elastic deformation is proportional to the amount of stress on the material. If the stress is reduced to zero, the deformation disappears. Material undergoes ductile deformation when the stress exceeds the elastic limit. At this point the deformation is permanent even if the stress is eliminated.
Surface waves cause both an
up-and-down and a side-to-side motion as they pass through rocks
Floods that cover small areas are known as ___.
upstream floods
__ form where water flows down steep slopes onto flat plains
Alluvial fans
What is the difference between an earthquake's focus and its epicenter?
An earthquake's focus is the point of initial fault rupture which is often located deep underground. The epicenter is the point on Earth's surface directly above the focus.
In which country would intense chemical weathering most likely be found?
Brazil
__form when streams enter large, relatively quiet bodies of water
Deltas
Groundwater Cleaning
If water travels slowly through sand or permeable sandstone, the water is purified
How can you identify the development level of a soil by its soil profile?
Poorly developed soils show little distinction between their soil horizons or may be missing horizons all together
What has to occur for a stream to begin the process of rejuvenation?
The land over which the stream flows either has to be uplifted or the base level must be lowered.
humus is
decayed organic matter in soil
Where is water flow the slowest in a meander?
inside
Stress is
the force per unit area that acts on a material
Erosion is
the process that moves weathered pieces of rock to new locations
Artesian Well
the water in the ground rises under its own pressure