GEO week 3
Based on map, which of the following plates contain both continental and oceanic crust?
1) Australian plate 2) North American plate 3) South American plate 4) African plate
Best basic ways for scientists to determine Earth's internal structure
1) Observation that meteorites that land on earth are composed of nickel and iron 2) the hypothesis that Earth's magnetic field results from the circulation of metallic ions within the outer core 3) the way seismic waves change velocity as they travel through the interior 4) the discovery that shear waves do not penetrate the outer core, but compression waves do
Paleomagnetism is defined as
1) The study of how rocks containing magnetic minerals retain their orientation on Earth's magnetic field 2) the study of fossil magnetism in rocks
Development of a mid-oceanic ridge system
1) a rising convection cell causes a continental plate to fracture 2) the asthenosphere melts and forms magma 3) tension and silting create a Rift Valley 4) rising magma forms layers of basalt 5) the rift widens and is flooded
Which of the following are examples of the crucial role plate tectonics has played in the evolution of life on Earth?
1) a subduction zone's oceanic trench served as biographical boundary 2) increases in land and area over time created more terrestrial habitat 3) continental drift caused terrestrial life-forms to evolve in isolation 4) life may have originated around volcanic vents on the seafloor
Earth's magnetic field is important because
1) animal migration 2) blocking us from solar radiation (most important) 3) human navigation
Which of the following are ways in which plate tectonics can affect earth's climate over the course of geological time?
1) confidential drift 2) volcanic ash eruptions 3) mountain building 4) ocean circulation
Characteristics of Earth's crust
1) contains silicate minerals 2) contains both basaltic and granitic parts
Examples of convergent plate boundaries
1) continental-continental 2) oceanic-oceanic 3) oceanic-continental
Characteristics of Earth's core
1) has a density GREATER than 10 gm/cm3 2) contains both solid and liquid parts 3) contains nickel 4) contains iron
Evidence Wegener used to support continental drift
1) matching of similar sequences of rocks in Africa and South America 2) jigsaw puzzle fit of South American and Africa 3) matching unique plant and animal fossils in Africa and South America
Based on map, which of the following plates contain only oceanic crust?
1) nazca 2) scotia 3) Jaun de fuca 4) Philippine
Surface features that happen at transform plate boundaries
1) no current or recent volcanism 2) fault valleys with horizontal offset of linear features such as stream channels 3) transform faults offsetting parts of mid-ocean ridged
Surface features that develop at divergent plate biundaries
1) ocean basin with a spreading center in the middle 2) Rift Valley or graben formed by faulting 3) central topographic bulge caused by buckling
Surface features that developed at a convergent plate boundary
1) oceanic trench caused by buckling 2) mountain range containing numerous volcanoes 3) string of andesitic volcanic islands 4) mountain chain of intesnlynfolded and faulted rocks
Characteristics of Earth's oceanic crust
1) overall composition similar to basalt 2) uniform thickness 3) thickness of around 3 miles (5km)
What led to the development of continental drift hypothesis?
1) people suggested as early as the late 1500s that continents had torn away from each other 2) many people noticed the similar outlines of continents on either side of the Atlantic
Characteristics of Earth's mantle
1) susceptible to plastic deformation 2) contains iron-rich silicate minerals 3) has a density LESS than 10 gm/cm3
Which of these represent oceanic-confidential convergent boundaries?
1) the Pacific Northwest 2) the western coast of South America
3 strongest pieces of evidence that Earth's outer core is liquid?
1) the evidence that shear waves are unable to pass through liquids, but compression waves can 2) the discovery that shear waves do not penetrate The core, but compressional waves do 3) the hypothesis that Earth's magnetic field results from the circulation of metallic ions
When two continental plates converge
1) the two land masses crumple and deform 2) subduction stops due to the buoyancy of the continents 3) many earthquakes occur
Characteristics of Earth's continental crust
1) variable thickness 2) overall composition similar to granite 3) thickness as much as 45 miles (70 km)
Characteristics of Earth's asthenosphere
1) weak layer that flows and deforms plastically 2) contains silicate minerals just below their melting point 3) has a density less than 10 gm/cm3
The oldest rocks recovered from the seafloor are about _______ years old
200 million
Which of the following can be used as an illustrative example of slab pull effect?
A blanket sliding completely off a bed when oart of the blanket is left hanging over the size
Which best describes the difference between a fault and a fracture?
A fault is a break in the rock where some movement has taken place, in a fracture no movement has taken place.
The Wallace line in Indonesia separates distinct groups of animals. It's location is marked by
An oceanic trench that did not allow for the creation of land bridges
Due to its influence on Earth's _____, plate tectonics is directly tied to our food and water supplies
Climate
Key factors that determine the elastic limit of rocks and whether they deform brittlely or ductilely to stress are _______. Other factors include temperature, pressure, and time.
Composition and internal structure
The mapping of earthquake epicenters by the world's scientists indicates that earthquakes are ____
Concentrated in zones
Heat transfer driven by temperature-induced changes in the density of material is called ______
Conduction
The uniform pressure that surrounds rocks at depth is ______
Confining pressure
The matching of similar sequences of rocks and fossils and the jigsaw puzzle fit of South America's and Africa's shorelines were WLL used as evidence to support the idea of _____
Continental drift
Plate movement results from ______ cells within the mantle
Convection
Process of ______ and separation of elements and minerals based on density explains Earth's layered structure
Convection
The earth's _______ is characterized by being both solid and liquid and comprised of predominantly iron and nickel
Core
Earth's layers by shallowest to deepest
Crust, mantle, outer core, inner core
When comparing the composition of Earth's crust and deeper interior, silicates are dominant in the _____ and iron is dominant in the _____.
Crust; deeper interior
Name given to the temperature at which a magnetic mineral loses its magnetic properties?
Curie point
Movement in convection cell is ultimately driven by differences in ______
Density
Many scientists believe that life may have originated around seafloor volcanic vents similar to those found at present-day ______ plate boundaries
Divergent
Rift valleys developed at
Divergent boundaries
If enough heat is applied to a solid material, it would change from being brittle to being _____
Ductile
Which observation from paleomagnetic studies of continental rocks made no sense without seafloor spreading and the theory of plate tectonics?
Each of earth's continents exhibited a different polar wandering path
Permanent deformation occurs in rocks when they exceed their _____ limit.
Elastic
Structure, time, pressure, composition, and temperature are
Factors that contribute to the dissimilar materials having different elastic limits and deforming differently
A ______ is a break in the rock along which movement has taken place
Fault
What occurs when rocks are deformed beyond their elastic limits?
Fracture and flow
The change in Earth's temperature wifh depth is known as the _______ gradient
Geothermal
A convection cell is the circular motion of ______ driven by temperature-induced changes in density
Heat and matter
How would you get a material flow instead of fracture when stress is applied to it?
Heat it up
Order in which ideas and evidence for continental drift were developed
In geo pic folder
The African Geeat Rift Valley is in the ______ stages of development as a divergent boundary
Initial
Although the two most abundant elements in Earth's crust are oxygen and silicon, when considering the whole planet, the dominant element composing earth is ______
Iron
Plate tectonics are referred to as a theory because
It provides a comprehensive and unified explanation of how the world operates
Common natural hazards at plate boundaries?
Landslides, volcanic eruptions, and earthquakes
Earth's tectonic plates are equivalent to which of the following layers?
Lithosphere
The Earth's _______ consists of mantle and crystal rocks that are relatively brittle and rigid
Lithosphere
Scientists generally believe that the convective motion of heat and matter in the ______ explains why lithospheric plates are slowly moving on top of the asthenosphere
Mantle
Lithospheric plates are believed to be moving in the same direction as the
Mantle convects
Which of the following are Earth's four major layers shown by seismic studies to be significantly different in composition and physical properties?
Mantle, crust, inner core, and outer core
The mid-Atlantic ridge is the longest ______ chain on Earth
Mountain
Earth's magnetic field is formed by
Movement in Earth's outer core
When seismologists preformed detailed studies _____, they found that the earthquakes occur in an inclined zone that extended several hundred miles down into the mantle
Near ocean trenches
Because Werner lacked a mechanism of continental movement, continental drift was ______
Not widely accepted by the scientific community
Basaltic magma generated from melting asthenosphere rises at mid-ocean ridged to form _____ lithosphere
Oceanic
The western cost of South America and the Pacific Northwest are both examples of _______ boundaries
Oceanic-continental convergent
Volcanic Island arcs are formed at
Oceanic-oceanic convergent plate boundaries
The nonrandom distribution of which two natural resources are most directly related to the rock cycle and plate tectonics?
Oil and mineral
Alfred Wegener reassembled the land masses of Asia, Australia, Europe, Africa, India, North America, and South America into a supercontinent he called ______
Pangea
Andesitic magma is created when basaltic rock
Partially melts and creates a more silica-rich magma
Earths internal heat causes the rigid pieces of Earth's crust to move in relationship to one another. This is the theory of _____ ______.
Plate tectonics
Convergent plate boundaries have which type of movement?
Plates coming together
Scientists have been able to confirm that subduction is taking place by systematically _____, which indicate that lithospheric slabs are descending into the mantle
Preforming detailed seismic studies
Uranium, thorium, and potassium are _____ elements that give off heat when they decay, providing Earth with a source of internal energy.
Radioactive
A seismic wave moving in Earth may either ______ (bounce off) or _____ (bend) when encountering a different layer of material
Reflect; refract
2 main sources of Earth's internal heat are radioactive decay and ______ heat from planetary formation
Residual
What is the process in which rising mantle material at a divergent boundary pushes the lithosphere upward, causing the elevated oceanic plate to slide downward over the sloping surface of the asthenosphere?
Ridge push
Why is seismic risk less severe at divergent boundaries compared to convergent and transform boundaries
Rocks store more energy before returning when under compression or shear forces, compared to tension
The _______ is a well-known transform plate boundary
San Andreas fault
slab pull
Slab sinks and drags rest of the plate into the subduction zone
The deformation of rocks under stress is called ____
Strain
When force is applied to an object, that object is under _____
Stress
The process of lithospheric slabs descending into the mantle is called
Subduction
Because rocks store more energy before rupturing when under compression or shear forces when compared to _____, major quakes are less common along divergent boundaries
Tension
Which of the following represents a spreading center in the earliest stage of development?
The African great Rift Valley is
What type of evidence collected by ocean research drilling rigs in the late 1960's confirmed seafloor spreading?
The age of basalt on the sea floor
Divergent plate boundaries have what type of movement?
The plates are pulling apart
Magnetic reversal occurs when
The polarity of Earth's magnetic field changes
Two plates moving in opposite directions in a shearing motion occurs at
Transform plate boundaries & transform faults
Ocean ______ are narrow, steep-sided depressions with depths as great as 36,000 feet (11,000 m) below sea level
Trenches
A common occurrence at oceanic-continental convergent plate boundaries are
Volcanic mountain belts
Compared to the Lithosphere, the Asthenosphere is
Weaker and more easily deformed
3 major types of plate boundaries
divergent, convergent, transform
Seafloor spreading is
the process by which new oceanic crust is made as the plates separate and move away from each other