Download Unit 3: Plate Tectonics: Test Review

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Physical oceanography wikipedia , lookup

Post-glacial rebound wikipedia , lookup

Ocean wikipedia , lookup

Nature wikipedia , lookup

Deep sea community wikipedia , lookup

Geology wikipedia , lookup

Earthquake wikipedia , lookup

Volcano wikipedia , lookup

History of geology wikipedia , lookup

Geophysics wikipedia , lookup

Oceanic trench wikipedia , lookup

Abyssal plain wikipedia , lookup

Tectonic–climatic interaction wikipedia , lookup

Mantle plume wikipedia , lookup

Large igneous province wikipedia , lookup

Plate tectonics wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Unit 3: Plate Tectonics: Test Review
Continental Drift
1. What is the large landmass when continents were joined together? Pangea
2. What is the hypothesis of continental drift? Continents drifted to their current location
after Pangea.
3. Who proposed the hypothesis of continental drift? Wegener
4. What are the three evidence clues for continental drift?
- Climate Clues
- Rock Clues
- Fossil Clues
5. What was the Glossopteris? A fern-like plant which only grows in warm climates.
6. Where was it found? Antarctica, South America, India, Africa and Australia.
7. How did it prove the existence of Pangaea? The continents which are now in cooler
climates, could not have supported the growth of Glossopteris proving the continents
must have been in a warmer climate at one time.
Plate Tectonics
8. In which layer of the Earth is magma formed? Mantle
9. Which layer provides the heat? Core
10.What do we call the large sections of the Earth’s crust? Tectonic Plates
11.What are convection currents? A Cycle of heating, rising, cooling, and sinking due to
DENSITY in the mantle which is thought to be the force behind plate tectonics.
12. Is hot water more or less dense than cold water? Less dense
13. What causes magma to rise to the surface? Heat and Density.
14. What causes Earth’s plates to move? Convection Currents
15. What could cause the plates to stop moving? No heat source
16. What are the three types of plate boundaries? Transform, Convergent, and divergent
17. What Geologic activities occur at each type of boundary?
Transform: Earthquakes
Convergent: Earthquakes, Mountains, Volcanoes, Subduction Zone/Trench, Island Arc
Divergent: Rift Valley, Mid Ocean Ridge, Volcanoes
18. What is the “zone” where continental and oceanic crust meet and the oceanic crust
sinks below the continental crust?
Subduction Zone
19.What type of plate boundary causes this “zone”? convergent
20. What type of boundary is the Mid-Atlantic Ridge an example? Divergent
21.
Which two plates are to the west of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge? North American
and South American
22. Which two plates are to the east of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge? African and Eurasian
23.What type of boundary is the San Andreas Fault? Transform
24.What occurs at the San Andreas Fault? (Earthquakes, Mountains and/or volcanoes)?
Earthquakes
25.
What type of plate boundary is found at the location of the Himalayan
Mountains? Convergent (continental-continental)
26.
What occurs at the Himalayan Mountains? (Earthquakes, Mountains and/or
volcanoes) Mountains, Earthquakes
27.
What is a “Hot Spot”? A place where magma is coming up to the surface
through a plate – not at a plate boundary
28.Name two places on Earth where there is a Hot Spot. Hawaii, Yellowstone
Sea Floor Spreading
27. Who came up with the theory of Sea Floor Spreading? Hess
28. What happens during this process? Hot, less dense material rises to the surface and
cools to form a ridge/ mountains.
29. What type of boundary does it occur along? Why? Divergent, because it is spreading
apart.
30. Is new crust created, destroyed or neither? Created
31. What happens when continental crust meets continental crust? Mountains