Earth Science UNIT 1
Atomic mass
Number of protons and neutrons
Protons
Positively charged particles
Processes of mechanical weathering
frost wedging, salt crystal growth, sheeting, biological activity
Seafloor spreading
process by which new seafloor is created along the ocean ridge
Fracture
property of having chemical bonds that are equally strong in all directions
What causes a flood?
when stream discharge exceeds channel capacity -caused from snowmelt, heavy rainfalls, flash floods
How the Hawaiian islands formed
when the pacific plate moved over a hot spot and island after island rose up out of water as magma hardened
Transform faults
where tectonic plates slide horizontally past each other
Divergent boundaries
(constructive margins) -two plates move apart -upwelling of mantle creates a new sea floor
Convergent boundaries
(destructive margins) -two plates move together -oceanic lithosphere descends and is reabsorbed into mantle
Rocks
-Naturally occuring solid masses of minerals or mineral-like matter such as natural glass or organic material
What evidence supports plate tectonics theory?
-age and thickness of seafloor sediment -hot spot-tracks -magnetic reveals and sea flooring spreading
4 main types of drainage patterns
-dendritic -radial -rectangular -trellis
Classifications of rocks
-igneous, sedimentary, metamorphic
running water erosion
-is the dominant agent of erosion -when it rains, loose material is picked up and carried along by the rainwater running off the surface.
Silicates
-most common mineral group -based on silicon-oxygen tetrahedron -make up 90% of Earth's crust
Youthful stream
-mostly downcutting -steep V-shaped valley -no floodplain -Steep gradient -rapids and waterfalls -Little or no Deposition -straight course -no meanders
Old stream
-mostly side cutting -Very wide valley -very wide floodplain -very gentle gradient -no rapids/waterfalls -Deposition of sediment -back swamps
Minerals
-naturally occurring -inorganic solid -crystalline structure -definite chemical composition
Karst topography
-region in which a layer of limestone close to the surface creates deep valleys, caverns and sinkholes -caused by groundwater dissolution
Quartz
-second most abundant mineral in Earth's crust -common in igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic rock -variety of colors -only common mineral composed completely of Silicon and Oxygen
evidence behind continental drift
-similarity between coastlines on opposite sides of the Atlantic -identical fossils found in South America and Africa -rock types and geologic features match up -evidence for glaciation on continents that are now tropical
Metamorphism
-the process that leads to change in mineralogy, texture, and sometimes chemical composition -because of chemical processes or changes in temperature and pressure
Water table
-the upper level of the saturated zone of groundwater -irregular and changes during drought
Porosity
-total volume of rock or sediment that consists of open pore space -depends on size and shape, packing, and sorting of grains -high permeability
Ground water
-water held underground in the soil or in pores and crevices in rock -largest reservoir of freshwater
Water Cycle steps
1. Evaporation 2. Condensation 3. Precipitation 4. Run off 5. Transpiration 6. Infiltration
Radial pattern
A system of streams running in all directions away from a central elevated structure (volcano)
Metamorphic rock
A type of rock that forms from an existing rock that is changed by heat, pressure, or chemical reaction (slate, marble, quartzite, schist)
Permeability
Ability of rock or soil to allow water to flow through it
Hydrosphere
All the water at and near the surface of the earth, 97% of which is in oceans
Slate
Fine-grained, low-grade metamorphic rock, formed by the metamorphism of shale
Type of rock most common in caves
Limestone
electrons
Negatively charged particles
Ore
Rock that contains a metal or economically useful mineral
Evaporation
The change of a substance from a liquid to a gas
crystal habit (form)
The overall shape of a crystal
Lithification
The process that converts sediments into solid rock by compaction or cementation (sediment-sedimentary rock)
cone of depression
an area lacking groundwater due to rapid withdrawal by a well
Sedimentary rock
a rock that forms from compressed or cemented layers of sediment (Limestone, Sandstone, shale, coal)
Mohs scale
a series of 10 minerals used as a standard in determining hardness
Dendritic pattern
a stream system that resembles the pattern of a branching tree
Igneous rock
a type of rock that forms from the cooling of molten rock at or below the surface (Granite, Diorite, Obsidian, Basalt)
Cleavage
ability to split easily along smooth, flat surfaces.
Chemical weathering
alters a rock's chemical makeup by changing the minerals that form the rock or combining them with new chemical elements (Water)
Hot spot
area of volcanism, high heat flow, and crustal uplift above a mantle plume
diagnostic properties of minerals
characteristics used for identifying minerals (crystal form, luster, color, streak, hardness, cleavage, specific gravity/taste, feel, double refraction, smell, reaction to acid)
Rectangular pattern
characterized by numerous right angle bends that develops on jointed or fractured bedrock.
most common drainage pattern
dendritic
types of plate boundaries
divergent, convergent, transform
Coarse grained
igneous rock texture in which minerals are easily visible without magnification
Lithosphere
is the crust and uppermost mantle
Trellis pattern
parallel streams with short tributaries meeting at right angles
Biosphere
part of Earth in which life exists including land, water, and air or atmosphere
silicon-oxygen tetrahedron
the basic unit of the structure of silicate minerals; a silicon ion chemically bonded to and surrounded by four oxygen ions
Streak
the color of a mineral's powder
Mass wasting
the downhill movement of a large mass of rocks or soil due to gravity (landslide)
Transpiration
the emission of water vapor from the leaves of plants
Steepest part of a river
the head
Continental Drift Theory
the idea that continents slowly shift their positions due to movement of the tectonic plates on which they ride
Atomic number
the number of PROTONS in the nucleus of an atom
Neutrons
the particles of the nucleus that have no charge
Mechanical weathering
the physical breaking of rock, resulting in smaller fragments
Discharge
the quantity of water in a stream that passes a given point in a period of time
Hardness
the resistance of a mineral to being scratched
Tenacity
the resistance to deforming stresses (ex. bend brittle fashion or elastically)
Plate tectonics theory
the theory that Earth's crust is made up of individual plates that gradually move in relation to each other
Luster
the way a mineral reflects light from its surface
How the Himalayan Mountains were formed
they were formed from continental plates colliding (Indian and Eurasian Plate)
Oceanic crust
thinner, more dense, younger crust making ocean floor
Gradient of a stream
vertical drop over a specified distance (steeper gradient provides more energy)
Run off
water that flows over the ground surface rather than soaking into the ground
Land Subsidence
withdrawing large amount of water sometimes causes sand and rock in aquifers to collapse, which causes the land above the aquifer to subside or sink