Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Frage 1
Frage
Alfred [blank_start]Wegener[blank_end] came up with a theory in [blank_start]1912[blank_end] that 300 million years ago there was one single continent known as [blank_start]Pangaea[blank_end]. He stated that this continent then split into two continents known as [blank_start]Laurasia[blank_end] and Gondwanaland. Today's continents were formed from further splitting of the two continents. He named this theory [blank_start]Continental Drift[blank_end] and supported his theory with several pieces of evidence.
Antworten
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Pangaea
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Gondwanaland
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Pangea
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Wegener
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Wegener
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Hess
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Vine
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Deliah
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1962
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1948
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1912
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1905
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Laurasia
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Pangaea
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Continental Drift Land
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Asian Pacific
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Continental Drift
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Island Drift
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Wegener's Drift Theory
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The Drift Theory
Frage 2
Frage
[blank_start]Convection Currents[blank_end] rise to the Earth's core. As they reach the [blank_start]lithosphere[blank_end] they cool and spread. This drags the plates above them causing a new crust to form. As the earth never increases is size some plates are destroyed. This occurs when one plate [blank_start]subducts[blank_end] under the other. This process is known as [blank_start]subduction[blank_end]
Antworten
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Convection Currents
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lithosphere
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subducts
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subduction
Frage 3
Frage
Which pieces of evidence were used by Alfred Wegener to prove the Continental Drift Theory?
Antworten
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Mesosaurus found in Africa and South America, Glacial Deposits in India and South America and the Rock Sequence in Scotland and Eastern Canada.
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Glacial Deposits in India and South America , the Rock Sequence in Scotland and Eastern Canada and the discovery of the Mid Atlantic Ridge.
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The discovery of the Mid Atlantic Ridge, Paleomagnetism and the Mesosaurus found in Africa and South America.
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Mesosaurus found in Africa and South America, Coal Mines located in the UK despite needing hot conditions and the discovery of the Mid Atlantic Ridge.
Frage 4
Frage
Who used sonar on the Atlantic Ocean floor and noticed it wasn't the deepest in the centre, helping identify the Mid Atlantic Ridge?
Antworten
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Fred Vine
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Harry Hess
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Alfred Wegener
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Maurice Ewing
Frage 5
Frage
[blank_start]Maurice Ewing[blank_end] used sonar on the Atlantic Ocean floor to help identify the Mid Atlantic Ridge in [blank_start]1948[blank_end]. 14 years later in [blank_start]1962[blank_end] a geologist named [blank_start]Harry Hess[blank_end] noticed that younger rocks wear nearer to the Mid Atlantic Ridge and older rocks further away. He concluded that the sea floor was spreading from the ridge by up to [blank_start]5cm[blank_end] per year. [blank_start]Fred Vine[blank_end] knew that iron minerals within rocks align themselves with the earth's magnetic field. Every [blank_start]300,000[blank_end] years the poles reverse causing new rocks to flip direction. This resulted in a symmetrical pattern of different facing rocks on either side of the ridge.
Antworten
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Maurice Ewing
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1948
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1962
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Harry Hess
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5cm
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Fred Vine
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300,000