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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 plate boundary at which one plate slips along the side of another plate. No new plate is formed and no old plate is consumed. But the grinding between the plates generates frequent and destructive earthquakes.
Dissolution
Loam
Transform plate boundary
Precipitation
2. The ocean floor is diced up by narrow bands of vertical fractures. Lie roughly at right angles to mid-ocean ridges - effectively segmenting the ridges into small pieces.
Conchoidal fractures
Factors of magma cooling time
Igneous rocks
Fracture zones
3. A layer of sediment in which grain size varies from coarse at the bottom to fine at the top.
Graded bed
Sulfates
O-horizon
Fracture and cleavage
4. A distinctive sequence of strata traced across a fairly large region. For example - a region may contain a succession of alternating sandstone and shale beds deposited by rivers - overlain by beds of marine limestone deposited later.
Saprolite
Hydrosphere
Viscosity
Stratagraphic formation
5. Chemical weathering during Which minerals dissolve into water.
Dissolution
Special properties of minerals
Extrusive igneous rock
Partial melting
6. Sedimentary rock composed of calcite or dolomite.
Glass
Composite cone (stratovolcano)
Carbonate rocks
Magnetic inclination
7. Biochemical sedimentary rock; it's made from cryptocrystalline quartz. Examples - flint and jasper.
Volcanic blocks/bombs
Melts
Granitic magma
Chert
8. Molten rock beneath Earth's surface.
Magma
Five steps of clastic sedimentary rock formation
Convective flow
Lava
9. Type of lava flow; surface layer of the lava freezes and then breaks up due to the continued movement of lava underneath - becomes a jumble of sharp - angular fragments - yielding a rubbly flow.
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10. The boundary between two beds is a bedding plane; several beds constitute this structure.
Phreatomagmatic eruptions
Rock texture
Soil
Strata
11. Mineral class; consist of a metal cation bonded to a sulfide anion. Examples - galena and pyrite. Many have a metallic luster. Can also be considered ores with high proportions of metal within the mineral.
Turbidity current
Clastic sedimentary rocks
Transgression
Sulfides
12. Type of rock; accumulated sand bars - within are mineral grains of quartz and feldspar - this sediment if buried and lithified.
Basaltic lava flows
Clastic
Saprolite
Arkose
13. A process occurring when sea level falls - the coast migrates seaward.
Stoping
Regression
Polymorphs
collision
14. Type of igneous rock composition; composed of dark silicates and calcium-rich feldspar - referred to as mafic (magnesium and iron). Make up the ocean floor/volcanic islands.
Glass
Shield volcano
Basaltic composition
Extrusive igneous rock
15. Type of lava flow; a lava flow with warm - pasty surfaces wrinkling into smooth - glassy - rope-like bridges.
Plate tectonics
O-horizon
pahoehoe
Sill
16. Actively slipping segment of a fracture zone between two ocean ridge segments - these faults make a third type of plate boundary - transforms.
Melting
Transform fault
Soil erosion
Apparent polar-wander path
17. Forms a 2885-km-thick layer surrounding the core. In terms of volume - it is the largest part of the Earth. It consists entirely of ultramafic rock - peridotite.
Regolith
Batholiths
Sandstone
Mantle
18. Some rock bodies appear to contain distinct formations - defined either by bands of different compositions or textures - or by the alignment of inequant grains so that they trend parallel to one another.
Rock layering
Decompression
Loam
Basalt
19. Some rocks develop their magnetization - their ability to produce a magnetic field - at the time that the rocks themselves formed. Such rocks - preserve a record of the Earth's magnetic field at known times in the past.
Convective flow
Paleomagnetism
Seamount chains
Transform fault
20. Type of igneous rock composition; composed of light-colored silicates - very rich in felsic (feldspar and silica). Major constituent of continental crust.
Volcanic pipes/necks
Granitic composition
Volcanic blocks/bombs
Effusive eruptions
21. Mineral crystal formation type; form from a solidification of a melt - meaning the freezing of a liquid.
Regression
Limestone
Crust
Melting
22. A nearly horizontal - tabletop-shaped tabular intrusion - parallel to layering within the earth.
Mafic
Sill
Ripples
Hydrosphere
23. A sediment-filled depression; in an area where the lithosphere has subsided.
Rock-forming silicate minerals
Transform plate boundary
Sedimentary Basins
Symmetry
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
B-horizon
Magnetic declination
Crystal structure
25. Rigid outer layer of Earth - 100-150km thick. Consists of the crust plus the uppermost part of the mantle.
Light silicates
Lithosphere
Lithification
Color
26. 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.
Plutons
Rock-forming silicate minerals
Fractional crystallization
Organic chemicals
27. Successive turbidity currents deposit successive graded beds - creating this sequence of strata.
Magnetic declination
Metamorphic rocks
Lapilli
Turbidite
28. Built up deposit of volcanic bombs and lapilli - known as volcanic agglomerate.
Magnetic reversals
Tuff
Bed
Heat transfer
29. The rate of increase in temperature - decreases with increasing depth. The dashed lines represent the solidus and liquidus for mantle rock (peridotite). The solidus line defines the conditions of pressure and temperature at Which mantle rock begins t
Special properties of minerals
Oxides
Geothermal gradient
Silicates
30. Distinguishing feature of magma; the process where magma sits in a magma chamber before completely solidifying - it may incorporate chemicals derived from the walls rocks of the chamber.
Area of igneous activity
Basalt
Assimilation
Deposition
31. Perhaps the cause for the large igneous provinces; formations within the mantle - plumes that bring up vastly more hot asthenosphere than normal plumes.
650-1100 degrees C
Cross beds
Plutons
Superplumes
32. Breaks intact rocks into unconnected grains or chunks - collectively called debris or detritus. Grain size from largest to smallest: boulders - cobbles - pebbles - sand - silt - mud/clay.
B-horizon
Depositional environment
Physical weathering
Andesitic lava flows
33. A linear belt in which continental lithosphere pulls apart - the lithosphere stretches horizontally.
Gabbro
Dissolution
ravertine
Continental rift
34. 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.
Partial melting
Zone of accumulation
Soil Horizons
Loam
35. Coarse pyroclastic debris - apple to refrigerator-sized fragments. Chunks of preexisting igneous rock or large lava blobs which discharge from volcanic eruptions.
Volcanic blocks/bombs
Root wedging
Crystal structure
Color
36. Materials that easily transform into gas at the relatively low temperatures found at the Earth's surface.
Turbidite
Volatiles
Crystal lattice
Continental drift evidence
37. Type of sedimentary soil/rock; Calcite in a pedocal soil accumulates in the B-horizon and may cement soil together - creating this solid mass.
Paleopole
Caliche
Compaction
Dipole
38. 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
Mantle plume
Chemical weathering
Depositional environment
Metamorphic rocks
39. An ultramafic rock with large grains. intrusive - phaneritic igneous rock.
Deep-ocean trenches
Organic sedimentary rocks
Peridotite
Shield volcano
40. A mafic rock with large grains. Intrusive - phaneritic igneous rock.
Hot spots
Tuff
Gabbro
Chemical sedimentary rocks
41. The compiled data from many marine cruises which defined a distinctive - striped and alternating bands of paleomagnetism.
Marine magnetic anomaly
Rocks
Dunes
Cinder cone
42. Subsoil - ions and clay leached and transported down from above accumulate here. As a result - new minerals form - and clay fills open spaces. Part of the zone of accumulation.
B-horizon
Partial melting
O-horizon
Chert
43. The distance of the deepest well ever drilled - hole in northern Russia. Penetrates only about 0.03% of the Earth.
12km
Pyroclastic debris
atmospheres (atm)
Ash
44. The layering nature of sedimentary rocks - surface features of layers formed during deposition - and the arrangement of grains within layers.
Lava domes
Granitic magma
Sedimentary structure
Glassy igneous rocks
45. An intrusion starting to inject between layers but then dome upwards - creating this blister-shaped intrusion.
Phreatomagmatic eruptions
Geothermal gradient
Volcano
Laccolith
46. A type of soil consisting of about 10-30% clay and the rest silt and sand. Pores remain between grains so that water and air can pass through and roots can easily penetrate.
The effect of the environment on eruptive style
Loam
Plutons
Plates
47. 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.
Deep-ocean trenches
Crystal
Thermal expansion
Asthenosphere
48. A mineral's growth that is uninhibited - has well-formed crystal faces.
Fractional crystallization
Effusive eruptions
Oxides
Euhedral crystal
49. Rocks whose crystals interlock with each other.
triple junction
Root wedging
Turbidite
Crystalline
50. Pea to plum-sized fragments of pyroclastic debris - consists of pumice or scoria fragments.
Lapilli
Bedding
Carbonates
Apparent polar-wander path