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Name: _____________________ Unit 5 Planet Earth Review Questions 1. What is a rock made up of? It is made up of one or more pure, naturally occurring, non-living crystalline materials called minerals 2. What is a mineral? A mineral can be an element ( a pure substance) or a compound. 3. In order to test the properties of a substance which test would you conduct? Moh’s Hardness Scale 4. What are the softest and hardest minerals used on the scale? Talc and diamond 5. Name 5 additional clues that you can use to determine what a mineral is. Luster, colour, streak, cleavage and fracture, crystals, transparency 6. Minerals that break with rough or jagged edges have ______________. Fracture 7. If a mineral breaks along smooth, flat surfaces, or planes, it has _____________. Cleavage 8. If you can see through a mineral when you hold it up to the light it is ____________________. Transparent 9. Name the 3 major families, or types, of rocks. Igneous, metamorphic, sedimentary 10. This type of rock forms when lava cools on the surface of the Earth. Extrusive igneous rock 11. This type of rock forms when magma cools under the surface of the Earth. Intrusive igneous rock 12. Large crystals will form in which type of rock? Intrusive 13. This type of rock makes up 75 % of all the rock we can see on the Earth’s surface. Sedimentary 14. _______________________ is the arrangement of sedimentary rock in visible layers. Stratification 15. ______________, or mudstone, is sedimentary rock formed from fine grains of clay or mud. Shale 16. ________________ is formed from larger granules of sand. Sandstone 17. __________________ is formed from rounded pebbles and small stones cemented together. Conglomerate 18. This type of rock can be formed below the Earth’s surface when extremely high pressure and heat cause the original rock (parent rock) to change form. Metamorphic 19. Rocks continually change from one type to another. This is called the _______________. Rock cycle 20. Explain how an igneous rock could become a sedimentary rock. ___________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________ 21. How is soil formed? ___________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________ rocks and sediment, plants, animals, leaves, twigs, dead worms and insects. Air and water fills spaces 22. Most of the decaying matter is made up of dead plant matter, called ______________. (compost) (p. 371) 23. It mixes with other matter to form the dark-coloured portion of the soil called ____________. (humus) 24. Humus is rich in nutrients. Name them. _______________________ ___________________________ _______________________ ___________________________ (nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, sulfur) 25. As worms, insects, and rodents burrow throughout the soil, they mix the humus with the ________________________. (fragments of rock) 26. A fertile soil can supply _______________ (nutrients) for plant growth. 27. Some soils are not fertile and do not have many nutrients. Give an example: ____________________________________ (eroded, rocky soil of steep cliffs and roadsides) 28. When scientists want to study the different layers of soil they dig and study the area. This is called a ___________________ (soil profile) ( p. 372) 29. The layers show different degrees of _____________________ (soil evolution) 30. The top layer in a soil profile is __________ (topsoil). It consists of darkcoloured, rich soil that contains _____________ (humus) and small grains of __________. (rock) 31. The topsoil has undergone the greatest number of changes from the underlying ____________. (rock layer) 32. The next layer is lighter in colour because there is little or no ____________ (humus) and it contains ____________ (minerals) that have leached from the top layer. 33. _________________ (Leaching) is the removal of soil materials dissolved in water. (p. 372) 34. The bottom layer of a soil profile contains: ________________________ and _____________________from above. (partly weathered rock, minerals leached) 35. The bottom layer is the beginning of the long, slow process of ________ (rock) evolving into __________. (soil) 36. ________________ (erosion ) is the movement of rock and mineral grains from one place to another. (p. 373) 37. _____________________ is the physical break – up or disintegration of rocks. (mechanical weathering) 38. Rocks ___________________ (rolling down a slope) or in a ___________________ (fast-moving) stream rub and bump against each other, becoming ______________ (smoother) and more ____________ (rounded). 39. ___________________ (Temperature) changes can also cause mechanical weathering. 40. How does temperature do this? _________________________________ ___________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________ (spring and winter, the days can be warm, water melts into rock and then freezes at night) 41. This process is called ____________________. (frost wedgiing) 42. Mechanical weathering is part of the process responsible for ____________________ (wearing away) (p. 373) and _______________________ is the part of the process responsible for ____________________. (building up) 43. _______________________ (chemical) weathering breaks down minerals through chemical reactions. 44. An example of chemical weathering is ______________. (acid rain) (p. 374) 45. Biological weathering is a physical or chemical breakdown of rock caused by ____________________. (liviing organisms) 46. How can a plant breakdown a rock? ______________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________ 47. Agents of erosion are (p. 376): ______________ _________________ ___________________ _____________ (glaciers, gravity, wind, water 48. __________________ changes occur when there are flash floods, landslides, and rock slides. (p. 376) (sudden) 49. ____________________ changes happen very slowly. Glaciers may take thousands of years to erode an area. (gradual) 50. When glaciers begin to melt and retreat, the meltwater forms channels and deposits sediment in new locations. Large rocks called ______________ (erratics) can be left behind, many kilometres from their source. 51. When wind picks up loose sediment, such as clay, silt, and sand, and then it strikes a rock it wears the rock down by ________________. (abrasion) 52. Wind erosion can be reduced by _________________, _______________, and ________________________. (planting vegetation, contour farming, reduced tillage) 53. Which was the most disastrous rock slide in Canadian History? When did it occur? (1903) 54. The __________________ River near Jasper is gradually deepening the quartzite rock canyon. (Athabasca) 55. A ________________ river continually changes the contours of the land. (meanderiing) 56. What is a source of sediment? (erosion) 57. Why does a diamond not leave a streak on a streak plate? ______________________________________________________________ 58, Name the layers from the Earth’s crust to the centre of the Earth. (crust, uppermantle, lower mantle, outer core, inner core) 58. Is the inner core liquid or solid? Why? 59. Wegener studied the fossil evidence on different continents and the interlocking shapes of the continents and developed a theory. What is it? __________________________ (continental drift) 60. What other evidence did Wegener discover? 61. What was the name given to the giant supercontinent in Wegener’s “The Origin of Continents and Oceans” ? __________________ Pangaea 62. J. Tuzo Wilson, a Canadian scientist, developed a theory to explain how the crust moves. Name the theory. _____________________________________ theory of plate tectonics) 63. _______________________ (converging) plates push together. 64. ____________________ (diverging) plates pull apart. 65. One explanation that geologists give for the movement of the Earth’s plates is ______________________ (convection currrents) (p. 392) 66. A _______________________ (subduction) zone occurs when 2 plates collide or converge, and one goes under the other. 67. Where is one place that the youngest sea floor is found? _______________________________ (Mid Atlantic Ridge) 68. A _____________________ (seismograph) is a machine that measures earthquakes. 69. It must be attached to ____________________. (bedrock) (p. 396) 70. The ___________________(Richter Scale) is a method of measurement of Earthquakes used by seismologists. 71. There can be many episodes of ground-shaking movement in an earthquake caused by __________________. (seismic waves) 72. Name the 3 types of Earthquake waves. ______________ __________________ _________________. 73. ______________ or _____ waves travel the fastest and can pass through solids, liquids, and gases. (p – waves) 74. ______________ or _____ waves travel only through solids. (secondary/S) 75. ______________ waves are the slowest of all three, but their rolling motion breaks up roads and buildings and they do the most damage. (surface) 76. The place deep in the crust where the earthquake begins is called the _____________. (focus) 77. The surface direction directly above the focus is called the __________________. (epicentre) 78. Rocks bend and stretch. However, when the pressure is too great, the rock breaks suddenly, creating a ____________. (fault) 79. When earthquakes happen under the sea. The water displaced by an earthquake can cause huge waves called ______________. (tsunamis) (p. 405) 80. A ________________ is an opening in the Earth’s crust that releases lave, steam and ash when it erupts. (volcano) 81. The opening in a volcano is a ___________. (vent) 82. When volcanoes are not active, they are described as _____________. (dormant) 83. In a subduction zone, the descending rock moves deeper and deeper until it melts into __________. (magma) It then rises up through cracks in the rock until it exerts enough ______________ (pressure) to cause the volcano to ___________. (erupt) 84. Give two examples of major eruptions in Earth’s history. ____________________________ ________________________________ 85. Volcanoes occur in an area known as the __________ ____ ________. (ring of fire) 86. The Canadian Rockies, the American Rockies, and the mountains in Alaska are all part of the ________________ _______________ of North America. (Western Cordillera) 87. Most mountains are large areas that have been uplifted due to the ______________ (movement) or ______________ (heating) of plates. 88. Sedimentary rocks that are placed under slow, gradual pressure can either ________ or ___________. (fold or break) (p. 413) 89. Rocks can fold if there is enough ________ and ___________. (heat and pressure) 90. The upward or top part of the folded rock is called the ______________. (anticline) 91. The bottom of the fold is called the _______________. (syncline) 92. A fault can be the result of squeezing or stretching of the Earth’s crust. When sedimentary rock is squeezed from the sides, it can form into slabs that move up and over each other. This is called ___________________. (thrust faulting) 93. Eventually, through the movement of the Earth’s crust, some older rock may end up on top of younger rock. These huge amounts of rock can form mountains called ______________________. (fault block mountains) 94. How are complex mountains created? (p. 414) _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ 95. Describe what an “old” mountain looks like. (p. 414) 96. Name a young mountain range. ____________________________________________ 97. How does an organism become petrified? _______________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________ 98. What is carbonaceous film? _______________________________________________________________ 99. ____________________ remains is when the actual organism or part of it may be preserved as a fossil. (original) 100. What are trace fossils? ___________________________________________________________ 101. Describe fossil mould and cast formation. (p. 420) _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ 102. What is the principle of superposition? 103. Sedimentary layers of rock can be referred to as ___________. (strata) 104. A fossil used to determine the relative age of the layer of rock is called and _________ ___________. (index fossil) 105. What is half- life? ___________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________ 106. What is radiometric dating? ___________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________ 107. What is radiocarbon dating? ___________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________ 108. The largest divisions in the Geologic Time Scale are _______. (eons) 109. Eons are divided into ________ (eras) and these are divided into _____________ (periods). 110. Name the four eras in the Geologic Time Scale. 111. ___________________ is a naturally occurring mixture of hydrocarbons, such as bitumen, coal, oil, and gas. (petroleum) 112. Petroleum is most often found in ______________ ________ ____________. (p. 428) (sedimentary rock basins) 113. __________ _________ (fossil fuels) are the soft parts of the plants and animals that were transformed into solid, liquid, or gas hydrocarbons. (p. 428) 114. _________ (coal) is usually formed from plants that grew on the land. 115. ________ (oil) is usually formed from water –based plants and animals. 116. ____________ (natural gas) can be formed from either land-based or water-based plants and animals. 117. ____________ (Bitumen) is a heavy, almost solid form of petroleum. 118. A small change that happens gradually over many thousands of years is an ___________________ _______________. (incremental change)