Enquiry Question 1 Flashcards

1
Q

What are the layers of the Earth?

A

Crust, Mantle, Outer Core, Inner Core

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2
Q

What is the crust?

A

Solid rock on the surface of the earth.

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3
Q

What is the mantle?

A

The second layer on the earth, hot and flows like a ‘thick liquid’.

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4
Q

What is the outer core?

A

Liquid iron and nickel and under huge pressures.

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5
Q

What is the inner core?

A

Solid, mainly iron and nickel

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6
Q

What is the oceanic crust?

A

Crust covered in oceans.
Always subducts under the continental crust.
Thinner than continental.
Denser.

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7
Q

What is the continental crust?

A

Crust covered in land.
Thicker.
Less dense.

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8
Q

What is a constructive plate boundary?

A

Where plates move apart from each other and magma seeps up and hardens to fill the gap and create new land.

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9
Q

What is a destructive plate boundary?

A

When plates move together and one subducts under the other and land is destroyed.

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10
Q

What is a conservative plate boundary?

A

When two plates rub against each other and move in different directions.

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11
Q

What is a collision plate boundary?

A

When continental crusts meet and push against each other and force land up to form mountains.

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12
Q

Who first had the theory that plate tectonics existed?

A

Wegener in 1915.

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13
Q

Where does an intra-plate earthquake occur?

A

In the interior of a tectonic plate, they are very rare.

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14
Q

Where do interplate earthquakes occur?

A

At plate boundaries, they are more common.

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15
Q

What is a hotspot?

A

An area created by a hot plume of magma that rises under the plate and occurs in the middle of a plate.

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16
Q

What is the Benioff zone?

A

The area under a destructive plate boundary where many deep earthquakes occur.

17
Q

What is the hypocentre of an earthquake?

A

It is the ‘focus’ point within the ground where the energy that is stored in the rock is first released.

18
Q

What are some features of a composite volcano.

A

tall, steep sided shape, traditional cone.
viscous (sticky) lava.
less frequent eruptions.
large eruptions.

19
Q

What are some features of a shield volcano.

A

shallow sided, wide in shape.
runny lava.
more frequent eruptions.
smaller eruptions.

20
Q

What are the three lava types.

A

Basaltic Lava.
Andesitic Lava.
Rhyolitic Lava.

21
Q

What are the primary volcano hazards?

A

Pyroclastic flows.
Volcanic gas eruptions.
Lava.
Tephra and ash.

22
Q

What are the secondary volcano hazards?

A

Lahars.

Jokulhlaup.

23
Q

What are seismic waves?

A

Shockwaves released by tectonic movements.

24
Q

What are the 4 theories explaining plate tectonic movement?

A

Mantle convection,
Slab pull,
Subduction,
Seafloor spreading.

25
Q

What is mantle convection?

A

The movement of hot magma under the crust.

26
Q

What is slab pull?

A

When newly formed oceanic crust sinks into the mantle, pulling the rest of the plate further down with it.

27
Q

What is subduction?

A

When one plate slides under another into the magma where it melts at a destructive plate boundary.

28
Q

What is seafloor spreading?

A

When new oceanic crust is formed under the ocean and it pushes the two plates apart.

29
Q

What are the four types of waves earthquakes create?

A

Primary,
Secondary,
Rayleigh,
Love.

30
Q

What is a primary wave?

A

The fastest travelling wave,
Moves through solid rock and fluids,
Pushes and pulls (compresses) in the direction of travel,
Causes the least damage.

31
Q

What are secondary waves?

A

Slower than P waves,
Only move through solid rock,
Up and down movement,
Causes the ground to shake violently.

32
Q

What are Rayleigh waves?

A

Only travel through the surface of the crust,
Ground is moved up and down and side to side,
Rolling motion,
Shakes the ground.

33
Q

What are love waves?

A

Only travels through surface of the crust,
Fastest of the surface waves,
Moves side to side (horizontal) as it moves forward.

34
Q

What are some secondary impacts of an earthquake?

A

Landslides,
Liquefaction,
Tsunamis.

35
Q

How are tsunamis formed?

A

Landslides,
Eruptions of volcanic islands,
Sub-marine earthquakes in subduction zones.

36
Q

How does a sub-marine earthquake form a tsunami?

A

The earthquake displaces the seas bed vertically which causes water column displacement.
The water then moves outwards in all directions from the point of displacement.
The water moves as a vast bulge in open water rather than a distinct wave.
It only forms a wave when the sea bed rises at the coast and the water is forced up as a wave.