Geology Final Exam #2

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148 Terms

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Integration of biology and geology in the study of fossils/history of life on earth
paleontology
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Ga
Giga annum: billions of years ago
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Mesozoic
middle life
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the terms jurassic, triassic, and cretaceous refer to
periods
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other than earth, the terrestrial planets are
mercury, venus, and mars
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what dominates the chemical composition of earth but only 5% of earths crust
iron
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present day earths core is dominated by
iron and nickel
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copernicus, kepler, galileo, and newton believed the universe had a ___ structure
heliocentric
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the Big Bang occurred
13.7 billion years ago
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our solar system lies near the outer edge of the
Milky Way
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approximantely of the earths surface is covered with land
30%
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the atmosphere is described as
a heat-softened relatively weak layer, 200 to 300 km thick in earths upper mantle
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according to popular theory, the moon resulted from
an impact of a mars-sized object on the earth
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geophysical evidence indicates that earths inner core is
solid
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the density of earths core is
less than the whole earth. approx 2.7-3.0 grams
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recent and ongoing collision of the Indian subcontinent and Asia has resulted in
Himalayan mountains
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the Red Sea is a result of
recent rifting of Saudi Arabia
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mid 1900s ideals regarding the force behind plate motion were determined by
convection in the upper mantle
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Antonio Snider-Pellegrini
published his theory of continental drift in 1912
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what relates perfectly to a "hot spot" (mantle plume)
Hawaiian islands
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oceanic crust is
youngest near a mid-ocean ridge and is progressively older at greater distance from ridge
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SONAR
allowed mapping of ocean floor
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Sir Francis Bacon
made maps that showed how South America and Africa drifted apart
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in tectonic plate settings, the Japanese islands most perfectly relate to
convergent plate boundary
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yellowstone relates most perfectly to a
hot spot (mantle plume)
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earthquakes that occur in the subjected lithosphere define the
Benioff (wadati-banioff) zone
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oceanic crust and lithosphere produces in the
convergent plate boundary
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minerals that are polymorphs have
the same chemical formula
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What defines a mineral?
- Homogeneous
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- Naturally Occurring
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- Solid
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- Inorganic
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- Well-defined Chemical Composition
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-Crystalline Structure
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the solubility of halite (NaCl) can be attributed to its
ionic bonds
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when molten rock freezes into a solid so quickly that atoms and ions don't have time to join together it is called
glass
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the presence of water (volatiles)
causes melting at lower temp than it would dry
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the earths atmosphere contains 78% nitrogen and 21%
oxygen
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in terms of tectonic setting, the Red Sea relates to
divergent plate boundary
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the solubility of the mineral halite can be attributed to its
ionic bonds
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glass isn't a mineral because
it doesn't have a highly ordered arrangement of atoms
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ash that falls from the sky and is cemented or welded is
tuff
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what kind of volcano has very gentle slopes and flows of low viscosity basalt
shield
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Harry Hess
Proposed the theory of sea-floor spreading
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a mafic igneous rock is
relatively low in silica content
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as a mechanism of physical weathering, frost wedging is most effective
at mid latitudes characterized by moist temperatures climates
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what mineral is most stable is weathering conditions
quartz
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oxidation of iron-rich silicate minerals produces
hematite
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when physical weathering breaks rocks into smaller pieces
the total surface area of the smaller pieces is more than original rock
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in what environment would you least expect to find gravel
deep marine
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fragments of rock that are transported by water currents
are sorted by size, become smaller, become rounded
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Peat and coal formation
when vegetation is preserved and subjected to a lot of heat and pressure
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steps of forming clastic sedimentary rocks
weathering, transport of product, deposition, and lithification
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in terms of depositional environment , a lake is known as
lacustrine
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a turbidite results from
underwater landslide
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the most common cementing substances in clastic sedimentary rocks
calcium carbonate, silica, and iron oxide
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shale is most perfectly distinguished among mudstone by
its tendency to split into sheets
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blue schist is a product of
high pressure metamorphism
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hypothermal metamorphism is most common
at mid ocean ridges where it relates to fluid vents called black smoker
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what is the greatest contributor to contact metamorphiusm
heat
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what is the highest grade metamorphic rock
biotite-garnet schist
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fine grained nonfoliated rock
hornfels
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foliation in metamorphic rock is attributed to
differential stress
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metasomatism
the process by which a rock's overall chemical composition changes during metamorphism because of reactions with hot water that bring in or remove elements
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formed by the recrystallization of limestone
marble
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rock cycle steps
diagenesis, sedimentation, melting, metamorphism
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The deadliest earthquake in history was in:
China in 1556
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side to side horizontal motion wave
love waves
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most earthquakes are associated with
faults
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Seismogaph works by
means of a delicate suspended mass that tends to remain stationary when ground moves
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Epicenter
Point on Earth's surface directly above an earthquake's focus
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Mercalli scale
A scale that rates earthquakes according to their intensity and how much damage they cause at a particular place
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earthquake magnitude
represents the amount of energy released from the source
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earthquake intensity
the degree of ground shaking at that locality
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amplitude
the amount of back and forth and up and down of the ground, larger amplitude is greater deflection of seismometer pen
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where do earthquakes happen
seismic belts or seismic zones; along faults
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how do earthquakes cause damage?
Ground shaking and displacement
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Landslides
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Sediment liquefaction
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Fire
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Tsunamis
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Disease
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`why do earthquakes occur on faults
bc the relative motion of plate boundaries causes slips
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S-wave shadow zone
Those areas more than 103 degrees from an earthquake focus where no S-waves are recorded.
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seismic tomography
A method that uses the seismic waves from earthquakes recorded on thousands of seismographs all over the world to sweep Earth's interior in many different directions and construct a three-dimensional image of what's inside.
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strain
a change in location or displacement, orientation or rotation, shape or distortion
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stress
as the force applied per units of area on the plane
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pressure
acts on all sides of an object. Force magnitude over an area
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compression
rock is being squeezed together
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a mineral filled crack
vein
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strike
The angle between an imaginary horizontal line on the plane and the direction to true north.
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dip
The angle of the plane's slope or, more precisely, the angle between a horizontal plane and the dip line, as measured in a vertical plane perpendicular to the strike.
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a horizontal plane has a dip of
0 degrees
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vertical plane as a dip of
90 degrees
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Dip slip Fault (Reverse Fault)
parallel the dip line
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strike-slip fault
A fault on which the slip direction is parallel to a horizontal line on the fault surface.
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normal fault
A type of fault where the hanging wall slides downward; caused by tension in the crust
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reverse fault
if the hanging wall block slides up. can also be called a thrust fault
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Anticline
A fold in rock that bends upward into an arch
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Synclines
downward, troughlike folds