GEO 101 EXAM 3
Hydraulic action (erosion)
squeeze and release action of flowing water that loosens and lifts rocks
Compression stress
squeezes rocks together till it folds or break
unstable slope
strength does not exceed gravity and denudation
shear stress
stress that occurs when forces act in parallel but opposite directions, pushing parts of a solid in opposite directions
Geomorphology
study of landforms
Geomagnetism
study of phenomena associated with Earth's magnetic field - shows evidence of seafloor spreading
Closer to the surface what happens
temperature and pressure decline and rocks are more rigid
ungraded stream
Has many temporary base levels. With time, the stream smoothes out the irregularities to develop a graded profile.
slide
Landslide—large amount of material failing simultaneously Translational slide—movement along a flat surface roughly parallel to the angle of the slope Rotational slides—moves along a concave surface
Theory of Plate Tectonics
Lithosphere is divided into plates that float on the asthenosphere. Boundaries create new crust, mountains, and seismic activity.
Hydrolysis (chemical weathering)
Minerals interact with water
mass movement
Movement of Surface Material Propelled Downward by Gravity
Slap pull
Near the trench, gravity pulls plate downward
Principle of Superposition
Oldest rocks are at the base of a rock formation while younger rocks are at the top of the rock formation
Earthquakes
Plates do not glide smoothly past one another. Sharp release of energy causes semsic wave
Rills and Gullies
Rill is a shallow channel in some soil, created by the erosion of flowing water. When rills get large enough that they cannot easily be removed, they're known as gullies
fall
Rockfall—simply a rock that falls Debris avalanche—mass of falling and tumbling rock, soil, and other material
Folding
Rocks are deformed as a result of compression
salt crystal growth (physical weathering)
Salt works its way up cracks, crystalizes and expands
Features of Karst Topography
Sinkhole- circular depressions, can collapse Towers- in the humid tropics, deeply jointed, thick limestone beds can be left as towers Caverns- Caves form just beneath water table
Normal faults, reverse faults, and strike-slip faults
Tension in Earth's crust pulls rock apart pushed together Horizontal movement
frost action (physical weathering)
breaks up rocks from repeated freezing and thawing of ice in cracks in rocks
Endogenic processes
brings heat energy and new material to the surface and recycles old material, moves and reshapes crust
seafloor spreading
builds mid-ocean ridges and drives continental movement
Mid ocean ridges
As they spread, more magma rises to create a new crust
drainage basin
-Collect water and sediments from drainage basins -any area of land where precipitation collects and drains off into a common outlet
Alfred Wegener
A German scientist who proposed the theroy of continental drift
Continental Divide
A drainage divide that separates drainage basins that empty into different bodies of water surrounding a continent
divergent boundary
A plate boundary where two plates move away from each other. Occurs in long rift valleys and mid ocean ridges
Transform boundary
A plate boundary where two plates move past each other in opposite directions
convergent boundary
A plate boundary where two plates move toward each other. Produce subduction zones
graded stream
A stream that has the correct channel characteristics to maintain exactly the velocity required to transport the material supplied to it.
karst topography
A type of landscape in rainy regions where there is limestone near the surface, characterized by caverns, sinkholes, and valleys. Weathering and erosion caused by groundwater can create underworld caverns.
metamorphic rock
A type of rock that forms from an existing rock that is changed by heat, pressure, or chemical reactions. Harder and more resistent to weathering
Which of the following was not offered as evidence to support Alfred Wegener's hypothesis of continental drift?
A)The "jigsaw puzzle" shape of the continents B)rock assemblages on opposite sides of the Atlantic Ocean C)Matching fossils of species on now separated continents D)Lack of oceanic ridges that would indicate sea floor spreading D
Interfluve
Area of high ground separating two river valleys or basins
Which of the following is true? A. The age of the sea floor is the same in most areas of the ocean. B. The age of the sea floor does not follow a discernable pattern. C. The age of the sea floor increases with increasing distance from a midocean ridge. D. The age of the sea floor increases with increasing distance from a trench.
C) The age of the sea floor increases with increasing distance from a midocean ridge.
Carbonation (chemical weathering)
Carbon dioxide reacts with certain types of rocks forming a solution that can easily be carried away by water.
Oxidation (chemical weathering)
Certain metallic elements combine with oxygen rusting
What plate boundaries can earthquakes occur at
Convergent-compresional forces, Reverse faults, Divergent- tensional forces. normal faults, Transform- shear forces, strike slip faults
Core
Dense and metallic, solid iron in the inner core, molten iron in the outer core
Mid-oceanic ridges occur at ________ plate boundaries.
Divergent
Principle of Uniformitarianism
Earth processes occurring today are similar to those that occurred in the past
Effusive eruptions
Effusive eruptions
Igneous rocks
Form directly from cooling of magma or lava. Ex: granite (magma) and obsidian (lava). Melt under high tempature and pressure
organic sedimentary rock
From shells and skeletons of marine organisms (coquina limestone) and the decayed remains of plants (coal)
continental drift
The hypothesis that states that the continents once formed a single landmass, broke up, and drifted to their present locations
Mantle
The layer of hot, solid material between Earth's crust and core, represents 80% of Earths volume
base level
The lowest level to which running water can flow and erode
Orogensis
The process of mountain building
chemical weathering
The process that breaks down rock through chemical changes. Common near the equator and in the summer, usually in the prescence of water
aggradation
The progressive accumulation of sediment along or within a stream.
stream graident
The slope of the stream and is measured by the difference in elevation. Steeper near head, more gentle near base
Erosion
Transport of materials by shit
confluence
Two tributary streams join together
Subduction zones
When the denser oceanic crust hits lighter continental crust, it slides beneath, creaing this
Deep-ocean trenches
a deep valley along the ocean floor beneath which oceanic crust slowly sinks toward the mantle
The maximum incline at which sediments on a slope can remain at rest before pulled downward by gravity is known as the
angle of repose
upward fold downward fold
anticline syncline
Mohorovičić (Moho) discontinuity
separates crust from the mantle
littoral zone
shallow sea zones
Tides
caused by the gravitational pull of the moon and sun
Types of volcanic activity
depends on source and viscosity (magma thickness or resistance to flow)
Four classes of mass movement
fall, slide, flow, creep
Rocks respond to stress by
folding (bending) or faulting (breaking)
sedimentary rock
form from fragments of eroded (worn away) rocks (sediments) that are put at low-lying areas (lying close to the water) and then compacted to form new rocks
intrusive igneous rock
form from mantle material injected into the crust where it cools and hardens beneath the surface. Magma dissolves into crustal rocks to form these rocks
Explosive eruptions
highly viscous and explosive
stable slope
if strength exceeds gravity and denudation
Where do earthquales beigin
in focus(hypocenter)
slopes
inclined surfaces that vary with rock structure and climate.
differential weathering
inconsistencies in rock composition, depressions, and cracks expose rock to various weathering processes. Not all rock weathers the same way.
Gravity is driving force downward. Resisting force is the strength of the slope material.
know that
lithospheric plates
large pieces of Earth's lithosphere that move over the asthenosphere
pressure-release jointing (physical weathering)
layer after layer of rock peels off in curved slabs or plates.
Contact metamorphism
magma rising to the surface "cooks" nearby rocks
As lava erupts along a mid-ocean ridge...?
magnetic particles cool and orient toward magnetic north. Creates ongoing magnetic record of Earth's polarity
chemical sedimentary rock
materials dissolve in water and harden into rock.
Weathering
physical and chemical processes that break up or dissolve rock
Hot spots
places where molten material from the mantle reaches the lithosphere
convection current
powers plate tectonics
Exogenic processes
processes Earth materials with the chemical and physical action of water, ice, and wind
Rock cycle
produces igneous, metamorphic, and sedimentary rocks
Tension stress
pulls on the crust and stretches rocks and make it thinner; occurs where two plate are moving apart
clastic sedimentary rock
rock fragments that compact under the weight of overlying layers and then cement and harden
Abrasion (erosion)
rock particles grinding and carving the streambed like sandpaper
extrusive igneous rock
rock that forms from the cooling and solidification of lava at Earth's surface, through volcanic activity. Magma extrudes as lava onto the surface to form these rocks
regional metamorphism
rocks buried inside crust subjected to high temperatures and pressures over millions of years
Faulting
rocks on either side of fracture move relative to the other side, leads to earthquakes
physical weathering
the mechanical breakdown of rocks and minerals. Dominate at high lattitudes and altitudes, common in the winter
denudation
the processes that cause the wearing away of the Earth's surface by moving water, by ice, by wind and by waves
Lithosphere
the rigid outer part of the earth, consisting of the crust and upper mantle.
creep
the slow downhill movement of weathered rock material. Freeze-thaw cycles, dry/wet cycles, daily temperature changes
Alluvium
the sorted material deposited by a stream
asthenosphere
the upper layer of the earth's mantle, below the lithosphere, in which there is relatively low resistance to plastic flow and convection is thought to occur.
stream discharge
the volume of water passing a point along the river in a unit of time.
low viscosity high viscosity
very fluid not fluid
flow
when moisture content is high Earthflows and mudflows
Ridge push
when the force of gravity moves a plate downward and away from a ridge
stream erosion
when water transports sediment