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5/11/2009 Science 20 Unit C – Earth: Unit Assignment pt B Name: __________ Date: __________ Use the following map to answer the following questions: 1. The diagram above shows the outermost layer of the Earth, broken up by a solid black line. a) List the 5 layers of the Earth and indicate which layer is the layer shown broken up above. (2 marks) Surface: _______________________ parts of the crust _______________________ Centre: _______________________ The layer shown broken in the diagram is the _______________________ ____________________. _______________________ b) What is represented by the solid black lines? (1 mark) c) Name two different natural phenomenons that are often found along this solid black line. (1 mark) LD Industries 5/11/2009 Use the following information to answer the next question: 2. The San Andreas Fault is a famous fault line located in California. The region of California is known for its frequent earthquakes. It is important to wear a jacket when studying these faults, even though you are in the middle of the desert. a) Describe the process occurring along the fault line that lead to an earthquake. (1 mark) b) There are three types of faults: normal, reverse and strike-slip fault. In a strike-slip fault, plates move horizontally to one another. In normal and reverse faults, the plates move vertically one overtop of another. Draw a diagram of this type of fault and name the process of the more dense plate moving beneath the less dense plate. (2 marks) This process is called: _________________. 3. The movement of the fault can cause an earthquake, as shown below. Write a definition for each feature of the earthquake below: (1 mark each) A - __________________ Defn: B - ___________________ Defn: LD Industries 5/11/2009 C- ____________________ Defn: 4. Match each description with the appropriate term listed. Place your answer in the blank space given. (0.5 marks each) i. ii. iii. iv. fault epicentre subduction focus v. vi. vii. viii. P-wave S-wave amplitude Richter magnitude ________ - maximum displacement of a wave from the rest position ________ - the region that first breaks along a fault during an earthquake ________ - the downturning of one crustal plate under another ________ - a seismic wave that travels through rock as a series of crests and troughs ________ - a crack in Earth’s crust due to the motion of one tectonic plate relative to another ________ - a number assigned to an earthquake based on the amount of vertical ground motion at its epicentre ________ - a seismic wave that travels through rock as a series of compressions and expansions of particles ________ - the point on Earth’s surface directly above an earthquake’s focus Use the following diagram to answer next question. 5. The location of an earthquake epicentre can be found by triangulation. Determine the location of the epicentre of this earthquake. (1 mark) LD Industries 5/11/2009 6. Seismic wave shadow zones are found when seismic waves from earthquakes are detected on the opposite side of the globe from the epicenter. a) What is a shadow zone? (1 mark) b) What kind of waves, (P-waves or S-waves) create shadow zones? (1 mark) c) What is the study of shadow zones useful for determining? (1 mark) 7. Match each description with the appropriate term listed. Place your answer in the blank space given: (0.5 marks each) i. ii. fossil fossilization iii. iv. trace fossil shale ________ - evidence in a rock of an organism’s presence ________ - evidence of or remains of ancient life preserved in Earth’s crust ________ - the process by which any trace of the existence of life is preserved within rock ________ - a common type of sedimentary rock formed from the deposition of layers of fine silt and clay particles 8. The following statements describe the process of creating a seismogram by using explosives and recording equipment. I. II. III. IV. Geophones convert seismic waves to electric signals. Explosives generate waves that travel through the rock. Electric signals are processed by a computer. Waves reflect off boundaries of rock layers and return to the surface. To produce a seismogram, the correct order of the statements is: (1 mark) ____, ____, ____, ____ LD Industries 5/11/2009 9. Match each description with the appropriate term listed. Place your answer in the blank space given. (0.5 marks each) i. ii. iii. petroleum trap drill core reef iv. v. vi. seismograph seismogram seismic ________ - relating to waves that travel through Earth as a result of explosions or earthquakes ________ - a large concentration of petroleum confined between layers of impermeable shale ________ - an instrument that records seismic waves ________ - a submerged ridge of rock, sand, or coral that rises to the surface ________ - a cylindrical sample of subsurface rock taken for analysis during drilling operations ________ - a record of seismic waves provided by a seismograph 10. Describe how seismic waves can be used to determine the location of petroleum far beneath the surface. Use a diagram in your response. (2 marks) 11. Describe two features suggesting that the continents of South America and Africa were once part of the same land mass. (2 marks) 12. One theory suggests that the dominance of grasses came about in Alberta in the late Tertiary Period because of the ability of hoofed animals to digest cellulose. Explain this theory. (2 marks) LD Industries 5/11/2009 13. Match each description with the appropriate term listed. Place your answer in the blank space given. (0.5 marks each) i. ii. iii. continental ice sheet glacier mountain glacier iv. v. vi. calving Wisconsin Glaciation ice-core data ________ - a large river of ice that forms on land and moves under the influence of gravity ________ - a process in which a portion of an iceberg breaks away from the main ice sheet ________ - a very large glacier, often more than 1 km in depth, that forms in polar regions ________ - a glacier that forms in mountainous regions at high elevations ________ - information gathered from ice samples extracted from drilling into an ice sheet ________ - the last glaciation period 14. Describe three different kinds of evidence of glacial action in Alberta. (2 marks) 15. Evidence in rock strata from around the world indicates that the average current global temperature compared to the average global temperature during most of Earth’s history has changed. Describe this change, and indicate by approximately how much the average temperature has varied. (1 mark) 16. Many European countries have warmer climates than Canada, even though they are as far or farther North on the globe. Give an explanation for this observation. (2 marks) LD Industries 5/11/2009 17. There are six explanations for the climate change recorded in ice-core samples. List the six theories and briefly explain each (1 mark each) a) b) c) d) e) f) 18. Explain how global warming can melt the Greenland Ice Sheet but cause a cooling effect on Europe’s climate. (2 marks) Bonus Questions: Answer only ONE!! Fair Bonus Question: How long is an eon? Unfair Bonus Question: In the movie The Core, how did the adventurers find their way out of the core of the Earth? LD Industries