Unit 3: A2 Geography: Plate Tectonics and Associated Harzards

Description

Everything for the Plate Tectonics Section of the A2 Unit 3 Exam
Matthew Partingt
Quiz by Matthew Partingt, updated more than 1 year ago
Matthew Partingt
Created by Matthew Partingt over 8 years ago
25
2

Resource summary

Question 1

Question
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.
Answer
  • Pangaea
  • Gondwanaland
  • Pangea
  • Wegener
  • Wegener
  • Hess
  • Vine
  • Deliah
  • 1962
  • 1948
  • 1912
  • 1905
  • Laurasia
  • Pangaea
  • Continental Drift Land
  • Asian Pacific
  • Continental Drift
  • Island Drift
  • Wegener's Drift Theory
  • The Drift Theory

Question 2

Question
[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]
Answer
  • Convection Currents
  • lithosphere
  • subducts
  • subduction

Question 3

Question
Which pieces of evidence were used by Alfred Wegener to prove the Continental Drift Theory?
Answer
  • Mesosaurus found in Africa and South America, Glacial Deposits in India and South America and the Rock Sequence in Scotland and Eastern Canada.
  • Glacial Deposits in India and South America , the Rock Sequence in Scotland and Eastern Canada and the discovery of the Mid Atlantic Ridge.
  • The discovery of the Mid Atlantic Ridge, Paleomagnetism and the Mesosaurus found in Africa and South America.
  • 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.

Question 4

Question
Who used sonar on the Atlantic Ocean floor and noticed it wasn't the deepest in the centre, helping identify the Mid Atlantic Ridge?
Answer
  • Fred Vine
  • Harry Hess
  • Alfred Wegener
  • Maurice Ewing

Question 5

Question
[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.
Answer
  • Maurice Ewing
  • 1948
  • 1962
  • Harry Hess
  • 5cm
  • Fred Vine
  • 300,000
Show full summary Hide full summary

Similar

How to Create A Mindmap
PatrickNoonan
Food Chains and Food Webs Quiz
Selam H
Cognitive Psychology - Loftus and Palmer (1974)
Robyn Chamberlain
Geography Restless Earth
sophieelizabeth
An Inspector calls Techniques
anya14
Sociology Key Words
kazoakley
Metallic bonding
anna.a.graysmith
Othello content knowledge quiz
rubyduggan
LOGARITHMS
pelumi opabisi
Variation and evolution Quiz
James Edwards22201
AQA Physics: A2 Unit 4
Michael Priest