ESC2000, Module 2 Test
Magma is
the mixture of molten rock, suspended mineral grains, and dissolved gas that forms in the crust or mantle when temperatures are sufficiently high
Non-explosive eruptions are characteristic of the following:
-Low viscosity magmas -Low-dissolved gas levels
Based on the map in the Explore: Earthquakes, Volcanoes, and Plate boundaries select the active volcanoes in Washington state
-Mt. Rainier -Mt. Baker -Mt. St. Helens
Which of the following plates are considered "Fast Moving"?
-Pacific -Nazca
Which of the following is not a common sign of an imminent eruption?
A blanket of fresh new lava or tephra spreads across the land
An assemblage of cratons and orogens is called a
Continental shield
The principle mechanism by which heat is transferred from deep inside Earth to the base of the lithosphere is __________ .
Convection
Can occur between plates carrying either oceanic crust, continental crust, or both; because of their very different properties, the results of the convergence will be fundamentally different.
Covergent Plate Margins
When two continental plates converge the _________ plate subducts under the other plate.
Crust is too buoyant to descend into a subduction zone
A change in shape or size of a body:
Deformation
What is the sum of the weathering, mass-wasting, and erosional processes that result in the progressive lowering of the Earth's surface?
Denudation
After transport, the sediment accumulates in its new location as a result of ________.
Deposition
Ground movement displaces stoves, breaks gas lines, and loosens electrical wires, thereby starting
Fire
Sometimes lava reaches Earth's surface through a vent that is an elongate fracture in the crust; this type of eruption is called a ________
Fissure eruption
The magma gradually cools and solidifies from the outside inwards causing different minerals to form in a process called _______
Fractional Crystallization
The common plutonic rock associated with basaltic magma is
Gabbro
Isostatic rebound is caused when what feature is no longer present on a continental plate?
Glacier
Clastic sedimentary rocks are classified based upon
Grain Size
The common plutonic rock associated with rhyolitic magma is
Granite
________________ are primary effects that cause direct damage to buildings, infrastructure, and the landscape.
Ground motion and disruption of ground surface
Which ocean is shrinking because its underlying crust is being subducted under other plates?
Pacific Ocean
The variation of magnetic mineral directions between sections of oceanic crust of varying ages, which preserves a record of Earth's magnetic field at the time of rock formation.
Paleomagnetism
The disintegration of rock as a result of physical breakup.
Physical Weathering (mechanical weathering)
For the May 22, 1960 Tsunami, what was the location of the recorded Tsunami wave height of 12.2 recorded at the 8 hour mark?
Pitcairn Island
A unifying theory that explains hundreds of years of independent observations of Earth's topographic features.
Plate Tectonics
All bodies of igneous rock that solidify underground, regardless of shape or size, are called
Plutons
Is based on the observation that sediment is deposited in more or less continuous layers.
Principle of lateral continuity
States that sediment is deposited in a layer that is horizontal, or nearly so, and parallel to Earth's surface.
Principle of original horizontality
States that in any sequence of sedimentary strata the order in which the strata were deposited is from the bottom to the top.
Principle of stratigraphic superposition
Distinctive landscape elements result from the activity of various surface processes.
Process
The active process and depositional environment combine to result in a unique end product, or landform.
Process
Another way that lithification can occur is through __________ , in which mineral grains that were once separate can grow to become interlocked.
Recrystallization
_______ occurs when the speed of a wave changes as it passes from one medium to another, causing the wave path to bend.
Refraction
The irregular blanket of loose, uncemented rock particles that covers Earth's surface.
Regolith
Another factor in landscape development, is related to tectonic environment.
Relief
______ magma is thought to form as a result of the partial melting of the relatively silica-rich continental crust.
Rhyolitic
Contains about 70 percent SiO2 and the highest gas content
Rhyolitic Magma
___________ travel around Earth, rather than through it, and they are guided by Earth's surface
Surface waves
Although some landscape features can develop rapidly, even catastrophically, others develop only over long geologic intervals.
Time
Shallow earthquakes, but can be very powerful
Transform Fault Boundary
Fractures in the lithosphere where two plates slide past each other, grinding and abrading their edges as they do so.
Transform Fault Plate Margins
Seismic sea wave
Tsunami
_________ contain patches of vegetation on the bare granite summit that develop in depressions formed by weather over thousands of years.
Vernal Pool
Soil Removal
Water and/or wind erosion, chemical leaching
Inorganic Enchriment
Water or wind deposition of materials
The result is conspicuous decomposition and disintegration of the rock by processes
Weathering
What is a subduction zone?
Where one oceanic plate is dragged or pushed below another lithospheric plate.
How can we tell that the magnetic field has flipped?
magnetic minerals orientation shows changes in the layers
A landscape ______ achieves a state of equilibrium, it is, and likely always has been, a _______ surface
never;dynamic
The __________ involves the movement of material through the geosphere as a result of the formation, breakdown, rearrangement, and reformation of rock.
rock cycle
Which of the following are the potential ways that the lithosphere move?
-Rising magma pushing on plates -Parts of a plate that is sinking into the asethonsphere drag the rest of the plate with it. -An entire plate slides into the asethenosphere.
Sedimentary rocks provide clues about
-Surface conditions at the time of deposition -Past climates -Geologic activity at the time of deposition
Which of the following influence the formation of metamorphic rocks? (choose 1 or more)
-Temperature -Pressure -Fluids
What was the water height (m) for 2015 Central Chile Earthquake & Tsunami recorded on Easter Island, Chile at the approximate 5 hours and 30 minute travel mark? (The information can be found in the interactive map under the Distant Tsunami Impacts)
0.9
Rank the following clastic sediment types by the largest (1) to smallest (4) grain size.
1) Gravel 2) Sand 3)Silty Mud 4)Clayey Mud
How quickly are the North American and African plates diverging at Mid-Atlantic Ridge?
1.8 cm / year (I say 2.5 cm / year)
Our planet's crust is made up of about _____ major tectonic plates.
12
What year was the first tide gauge records of a tsunami obtained?
1854
A S wave, or secondary wave, moves between _______
2 - 5 km/sec
In Explore: Sedimentary Rock Simulation what is the velocity for coarse sand (cm/s)?
359
In addition to the mid-ocean ridge volcanoes, there are at least how many active volcanoes?
500
The last major eruption of the Yellowstone Caldera occurred how many years ago?
640,000
Every month, the earth is shaken by approximately ___________ earthquakes.
80,000
Volcanoes that have erupted within historic times are said to be
Active
What is obsidian?
An extrusive (volcanic) igneous rock that cooled rapidly
Contains about 60 percent SiO2 and a lot of dissolved gas
Andesitic Magma
Contains about 50 percent SiO2 and little dissolved gas
Basaltic Magma
_______ are similar to stocks, but they are huge (up to 1000 km in length and 250 km wide); these enormous plutonic bodies are fundamental building blocks of continental crust.
Batholiths
What are seismic discontinuities?
Boundaries where the velocity of seismic waves changes suddenly rather than smoothly.
Which of the following is not evidence supporting plate tectonics?
Changes in lunar tides
The decomposition of rocks and minerals as chemical reactions transform them into new chemical compounds that are stable at or near Earth's surface.
Chemical Weathering
What is the smallest size category of a clast?
Clay
It helps determine which processes are active in any area.
Climate
Intrusive igneous rocks are generally
Coarse-grained
What is the name of the plate that is beneath the Pacific Ocean and off of the west coast of Central America?
Cocos Plate
What occurs when hot magma intrudes into a cooler rock?
Contact metamorphism
What are the three most important kinds of metamorphism?
Contact, burial, and regional
Earthquakes can be deep and also very powerful
Continental Collision Boundary
Which of the following is not a method used to measure the speed of plate movement?
Continental Cores
Wegener's hypothesis of plation motion. The process by which Pangea was separated.
Continental Drift
Surface processes interact with exposed rock in various ways, depending on rock type.
Lithology
The common plutonic rock associated with andesitic magma is
Diorite
Earthquakes tend to be fairly weak and shallow
Divergent Boundary
Fractures in the lithosphere where two plates move apart.
Divergent Plate Margins
Volcanoes that have not erupted in recent memory but still exhibit some signs of volcanic activity are said to be
Dormant
What is the Benioff Zone?
Earthquakes along a ocean-ocean subduction zone
any change of shape or size that reverses when the deforming force is removed:
Elastic Deformation
The predominant hypothesis of earthquake formation:
Elastic Rebound Hypothesis
The weathered particles sometimes move under the influence of gravity, but often they are carried or pushed by a medium such as water, wind, or ice.
Erosion
Volcanoes that appear to be completely dead are referred to as
Extinct
With temperature _______, the low melting-point components are removed as magma, leaving the higher-melting point minerals behind.
Increase
Sheetlike fractures.
Joints
According to Footage of the 1980 Mount St. Helens Eruption, what did the icy melt water on Mount St. Helens cause?
Lahar
Earthquake vibrations may cause soil to slip and cliffs to collapse.
Landslides
Igneous rocks are also classified by their silica content, which of the following is true for high silica Igneous rock?
Lighter in color.
The sudden disturbance of water-saturated sediment and soil can turn seemingly solid ground to a liquid-like mass of quicksand.
Liquefaction
Which of the following metamorphic rocks is non-foliated?
Marble
The class of rocks formed by subjecting existing rock to extreme heat and pressure (but not to the point of melt) is called:
Metamorphic Rock
The source of Earth's magnetic field lies in its ____________?
Molten Outer Core
Translocation
Movement of fine particles down the soil column
When two oceanic plates converge the _________ plate subducts under the other plate.
Older
What feature marks the divergent plate boundary?
Rifts
Regolith that has undergone erosional transport.
Sediment
Clastic rocks are classified as which type of rock?
Sedimentary
_______ is a measure of the energy released by an earthquake, taking account of the fact that energy may be released over a large area of a fault
Seismic moment magnitude
Rapid cooling causes what types of crystals to form?
Small, only distinguishable through a microscope
A part of the regolith that can support plants.
Soil
What was the location for the earthquake with the highest magnitude?
Southern Chile Earthquake and Tsunami
Deepest and most powerful earthquakes
Subduction Zone Boundary
What is the primary method to distinguish volcanic and plutonic rocks?
Texture
Andesitic volcanoes have a restricted geographic distribution. A well-known ring of andesitic volcanoes that surrounds the Pacific is called ______
The Ring of Fire
Transformation
The chemical convention of minerals in the soil column
What is the geologic time scale generally based upon?
The layering of rocks and sediments
Gabbro is coarser than basalt because
The magma that formed the gabbro cooled slower than the basalt magma.