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Test your basic knowledge |
Geology
Start Test
Study First
Subject
:
science
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. A cut and finished stone ready to be used in jewelry. Examples - diamond - ruby - sapphire - emerald.
Mafic
Gem
Sedimentary Basins
Columnar jointing
2. A solid in which atoms are not arranged in an orderly pattern. Forms when a liquid freezes so fast that atoms do not have time to organize into an orderly pattern.
Abyssal plains
Rhyolitic lava flows
Silicate minerals
Glass
3. A column of very hot rock that flows upward until it reaches the base of the lithosphere. In this model - such deep-mantle plumes form because heat rising from the Earth's core is warming rock at the base of the mantle. A possible explanation to the
Oxides
Lava tube
Lava domes
Mantle plume
4. Chemical weathering occurring in warm - wet climates can produce a layer of rotten rock - over 100km thick.
Five steps of clastic sedimentary rock formation
Weathering
Regolith
Saprolite
5. Places where intrusive igneous rock creates tabular intrusions cutting across rock that does not have layering - this nearly vertical - wall-like tabular intrusions is formed. Cut across layering within the earth.
Dike
Paleomagnetism
Tephra
Magnetic inclination
6. Distinguishing feature of magma; the process where magma changes composition as it cools because formation and sinking of crystals preferentially remove certain atoms from the magma.
Fractional crystallization
Asthenosphere
Differential weathering
Seamount chains
7. Along much of the perimeter of the Pacific Ocean - the ocean floor reaches astounding depths of 8-12km. These areas define elongate troughs - and they border volcanic arcs - the curving chains of active volcanoes.
Compaction
Peridotite
Cross beds
Deep-ocean trenches
8. Physical property of a mineral; a measure of a minerals relative ability to resist scratching - and therefore represents the resistance of bonds in the crystal structure being broken. The atoms or ions in crystals of a hard mineral are more strongly
Hardness
Volcanic pipes/necks
Bed
Color
9. Inorganic limestone; rock composed of crystalline calcium carbonate formed by chemical precipitation.
Luster
Saprolite
Ash
ravertine
10. Two different minerals which have the same composition but have different crystal structures.
Magnetic inclination
Polymorphs
Lava tube
Fragmental igneous rocks
11. A process occurring when sea level falls - the coast migrates seaward.
Regression
Topography
Shield volcano
Columnar jointing
12. Distinguishing feature of magma; the composition of the melt reflects the composition of the solid from which it was derived. Not all magmas form from the same source rock - therefore not all magmas have the same compositions.
Batholiths
Continental shelf
Source rock composition
Explosive eruptions
13. Sedimentary rock composed of quartz.
O-horizon
Siliceous rocks
Felsic
Gabbro
14. Mineral group; olivine group - pyroxene group - amphibole group.
Loam
Compaction
Limestone
Dark Silicates
15. An exposure of bedrock.
Melts
Volcanic blocks/bombs
Outcrop
Silicate minerals
16. Type of sedimentary soil/rock; Calcite in a pedocal soil accumulates in the B-horizon and may cement soil together - creating this solid mass.
Caliche
Igneous rocks
Dissolution
Sill
17. An insulated - tunnel-like conduit through which lava moves within a flow.
Deep-ocean trenches
Lava tube
ravertine
Cementation
18. The most important mineral group; comprise the most rock-forming minerals - they are very abundant due to large % of silicon and oxygen in Earth's crust. Examples - oxygen - silica - aluminum.
Relative plate velocity
Rock-forming silicate minerals
Mafic
Cementation
19. Cause of melting; when magma rises up from the mantle into the crust - it brings heat with it which raises the temperature of the surrounding crustal rock - and in some cases melting occurs.
Sulfides
Transgression
Oxidation
Heat transfer
20. Physical property of a mineral; refers to the shape (morphology) of a single crystal with well-formed crystal faces - or to the character of an aggregate of many well-formed crystals that grew together as a group. Depends on the internal arrangement
Divergent plate boundary
Euhedral crystal
Crystal habit
Laccolith
21. Process occurring after sediment has been compacted - can then be bounded together to make coherent sedimentary rock. Binding material consists of minerals (commonly quartz or calcite).
Biomineralization
Cementation
Graded bed
Facets
22. In addition to islands that rise above sea level - seamounts have been detected (isolated submarine mountains) - once volcanoes but no longer erupt.
a'a'
Upper mantle
Seamount chains
Depositional environment
23. The way in which the atoms are packed together within a mineral by chemical bonds. Five difference types of bonding can occur - covalent - ionic - metallic - Van der Waal's - and hydrogen.
Polymorphs
Loam
Lava domes
Crystal structure
24. Physical property of a mineral; different minerals fracture in different ways - depending on the internal arrangement of atoms. If a mineral breaks to form distinct planar surfaces that have a specific orientation in relation to the crystal structure
Fracture and cleavage
Chemical sedimentary rocks
Transgression
Assimilation
25. Lava flow; associated with felsic magma - consists of ash and pumice fragments - material is propelled from the vent at a high speed.
Pyroclastic flows
Transported soil
Ridge-push force
Erosion
26. Low-viscosity (basaltic) lava flows out of a volcano easily - whereas high-viscosity (andesitic and rhyolitic) lava can clog and build pressure within a volcano. Basaltic eruptions are typically effusive and produce shield volcanoes - whereas rhyolit
Specific gravity
Paleopole
Sill
The effect of viscosity on eruptive style
27. Rocks which develop when hot molten rock cools and freezes solid.
Igneous rocks
Rock texture
Deep-ocean trenches
Biomineralization
28. Places with particularly voluminous quantities of magma erupting or intruding.
Large Igneous Provinces (LIPs)
Outcrop
Rock-forming silicate minerals
Cementation
29. Mineral crystal formation type; form from a solution - meaning that atoms - molecules - or ions dissolved in water bond together out of water.
Lava domes
a'a'
Seamount chains
Precipitation
30. A pluton formation theory; a process during Which magma assimilates wall rock - and blocks of wall rock break off and sink into the magma.
Stoping
Outer core
Deep-ocean trenches
Laccolith
31. The compiled data from many marine cruises which defined a distinctive - striped and alternating bands of paleomagnetism.
Marine magnetic anomaly
Lithification
Ripples
Crystal lattice
32. Sedimentary rocks made up of minerals that precipitate directly from water solutions.
Salt wedging
Chemical sedimentary rocks
Dunes
Rock-forming silicate minerals
33. Core division; between 2900 and 5155km deep. Liquid iron alloy - it exists as a liquid because the temperature here is so high that even the great pressures squeezing the region cannot lock atoms into a solid framework. This liquid iron alloy is able
triple junction
Hardness
Sea-floor spreading
Outer core
34. The nature of Earth's magnetic field - like the familiar magnetic field around a bar magnet - has a North and South pole. The magnetic field is drawn with field lines - the paths along Which magnets would align - or charged particles would flow - if
rifting
Deposition
Dipole
Strata
35. Similar to ripples - but are much larger. Small ripples often form on the surface of these structures.
Volatiles
Basaltic magma
Dunes
Lava
36. Factors; the depth of the intrusion - the deeper - the more slowly it cools. The shape and size of a magma body - the greater the surface area - the faster it cools. The presence of circulating groundwater - water passing through cools magma faster.
Depositional environment
Polymorphs
Lava domes
Factors of magma cooling time
37. Because different soil-forming processes operate at different depths - soils typically develop into these distinct zones. These zones can be arranged vertically into a soil profile.
Transition zone
Continental drift hypothesis
Transgression
Soil Horizons
38. After sand has lost its feldspar composition due to weathering over time - sediment composed entirely of quartz grains gets buried and lithified to form this type of rock.
Quartz sandstone
Diagenesis
Shield volcano
Topography
39. Rock formations still attached to the Earth's crust.
Basaltic lava flows
Bedrock
Organic chemicals
Crystal habit
40. Type of magma; low in silica - fluid - crystallize at high temperatures.
Sea-floor spreading
Specific gravity
Symmetry
Basaltic magma
41. A plate boundary at which two plates move toward one another so that one plate sinks beneath the other. Subduction zones; Engage the sinking process known as subduction - between plates - consuming old oceanic lithosphere due to high density. Can sim
Convergent plate boundary
Mantle plume
Strata
Siliceous rocks
42. Mineral group; feldspars - quartz - muscovite - clay minerals.
Limestone
Light silicates
Gem
Jointing
43. Molten rock beneath Earth's surface.
Magma
Granitic composition
Arkose
Fissure eruptions/lava plateaus
44. An ultramafic rock with large grains. intrusive - phaneritic igneous rock.
Hardness
Peridotite
Clastic sedimentary rocks
Bedrock
45. The absorption of water into the crystal structure of minerals - causes some minerals to expand.
Hydration
Physical weathering
Gem
Magnetic anomaly
46. Sphere; Surface water along with groundwater - Earth consists of 70% surface water (oceans - lakes - and streams).
Hot spots
Frost wedging
Biochemical sedimentary rocks
Hydrosphere
47. Type of soil; forms directly from underlying bedrock.
Carbonate rocks
Lava tube
Paleomagnetism
Residual soil
48. Sedimentary rocks consisting of carbon-rich relicts of plants.
Sulfides
Organic sedimentary rocks
650-1100 degrees C
Halides
49. Type of volcanic eruption; produce mainly lava flows - yield low-viscosity basaltic lavas.
Hardness
Inner core
Effusive eruptions
Rock composition
50. Process where new divergent boundaries form when a continent splits and separates into two continents.
rifting
Cementation
Rock layering
Calderas