The asthenosphere is:
A layer of partially molten material within the upper part of the mantle
The section of the Earth's crust upon which contact is established between the partially molten mantle and the tectonic plates
An area within the mantle in which the lithospheric plates are sitting, made up of solid rock
The majority of landform features associated with the Earth's internal forces are the result of large, spectacular movements constantly being repeated every few thousand years.
Geomorphology is specifically the: (can select more than one)
Study of landforms and their origin and evolution
Study of distribution and form of rocks and minerals inside the Earth's crust
Study of landforms and their distribution and form
Study of the origin and evolution of rocks and minerals inside the Earth's crust
Study of how the lithosphere was created, and how it reacts to mankind
Radius of the core?
34 000km
340 000km
340km
3 400km
The separation between the asthenosphere and the lithosphere is called the...
Mohorovic Discontinuity
Wegener Margin
Wegener Discontinuity
Mohorovic Margin
Alfred Wegener began his theory of Continental Drift in 1915, but lacked scientific interest because it could not provide substantial evidence for a medium to which continents could move.
Tectonic Plate motion is widely believed to be caused by:
Convection currents in the mantle push the plates apart at diverging boundaries
Convection currents in the mantle carry the plates in directions from within the asthenosphere
Gravity pulls the plates towards the lowest point of altitude - the oceans - where they subduct or diverge and repeat the process
Convection currents in the mantle pull plates into subduction margins where displacement forces the other plates to move in the direction
Plates move at approximately ____ per year.
1.5 - 7cm
15 - 70cm
1.5 - 7m
15 - 70m
Oceanic lithosphere (crust) is denser than continental lithosphere.
An oceanic plate is the plate underneath all the areas of the various oceans.
What plate boundary is shown in this image?
Diverging - Constructive
Converging - Destructive
Transformative - Conservative
Converging - Collision
Diverging plate boundaries can form:
Mid-ocean ridges as new crust is formed from solidified molten material
Mountain ranges as plates are pushed together, forcing crust upwards
Subduction, as one plate pushes the other into the mantle
Earthquakes as a single fault line releases the build-up of pressure along the plate
Converging plate boundaries between oceanic and continental crust can form...
Subduction, as one plate pushes the denser plate into the mantle
A conservative margin between two plates can cause...
These landforms/activities are examples of destructive margins: (can select more than one)
Mount St Helens
Monsterrat
Iceland
Mid-Atlantic Ridge
Andes
Himalayas
Faults are fractures in a rock's structure.
The focus is the area on the surface directly above the epicentre of the earthquake.
What can be done to help prevent or worsen the impact of a tsunami?
(This is an open ended question. It is here to make you answer this for yourself and think about it now) (This answer is correct)
(This is an open ended question. It is here to make you answer this for yourself and think about it now) (This answer is incorrect)
A caldera is...
The area estimated to be affected by a volcanic eruption
The buildup of material around a volcano creating a cone-like structure
When a violent eruption blows off the top of an existing volcanic cone
What results in gradation?
Gravity and the radiant energy from the sun
Lithospheric movement and tectonics
Human influence
Earth's internal energy
Gradational processes work to smooth out the surface of the lithosphere.
Which of these statements on gradational processes are correct?
Exposed rock material is fragmented by weathering, detached by mass movements and agents of erosion, and then deposited at lower elevations as debris.
Exposed rock material is fragmented by agents of erosion, detached by mass movement and weathering, and then deposited at lower elevations as debris.
Exposed rock material is fragmented by deposition, detached by mass movements and weathering , and then eroded at lower elevations as debris.
Exposed rock material is fragmented by mass movement, detached by weathering and agents of erosion, and then deposited at lower elevations as debris.
Types of weathering: (can select more than one)
Unloading
Frost Action
Glacial Ice
Organic Action
Running Water
Winds
Solutions
Hydration
Oxidation
Organic Acids
Mass movement is the movement of weathered particles through gravity.
These are examples of mass movement: (can select more than one)
Land slides
Soil creep
Running streams/water
Earthquakes
Agents of erosion are wind, running water, and gravity.
Fluvial processes are the gradational process of erosion through running water.
Running water is particularly effective for fluvial processes of erosion in... (can select more than one)
Arid regions
Semi-arid regions
Hot-humid regions
Regions where human activities have damaged the protective cover of vegetation
Warm-humid regions
Hydraulic action in fluvial processes is:
The shearing force of the running water itself, exerting force and dragging on the river beds and banks
Rock particles carried by the running water striking the channel walls
Chemical solutions from rocks being exposed to solvents carried in the river
Abrasion in fluvial processes is...
Corrosion in fluvial processes is...
A pyroclastic flow is a river of hot liquid, ash, mud and rock moving at very low speeds at temperatures of about 500°C
Differential erosion is the process of softer rock in a plateau gradually being eroded away, leaving pillars of harder rock standing.