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Earthquake Vocabulary Notecards. Weathering Process of breaking down the Earth’s material by natural processes of water, wind, ice, and chemicals into.

Dec 11, 2015

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Peyton Blackney
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Page 1: Earthquake Vocabulary Notecards. Weathering Process of breaking down the Earth’s material by natural processes of water, wind, ice, and chemicals into.

Earthquake VocabularyNotecards

Page 2: Earthquake Vocabulary Notecards. Weathering Process of breaking down the Earth’s material by natural processes of water, wind, ice, and chemicals into.

Weathering• Process of breaking down the Earth’s material by natural processes of water, wind, ice, and chemicals into smaller pieces or sediments

•Destructive Process

Page 3: Earthquake Vocabulary Notecards. Weathering Process of breaking down the Earth’s material by natural processes of water, wind, ice, and chemicals into.

Erosion•Weathered or broken down rock and other material are moved by natural processes, such as water or wind, from place to place

•Destructive Movement

Page 4: Earthquake Vocabulary Notecards. Weathering Process of breaking down the Earth’s material by natural processes of water, wind, ice, and chemicals into.

Deposition• Process where sediments are settled or laid down in a new location

•Constructive Process

Page 5: Earthquake Vocabulary Notecards. Weathering Process of breaking down the Earth’s material by natural processes of water, wind, ice, and chemicals into.

Constructive Force• Force that builds up features on the Earth’s surface or on an existing landform

Page 6: Earthquake Vocabulary Notecards. Weathering Process of breaking down the Earth’s material by natural processes of water, wind, ice, and chemicals into.

Destructive Force• Forces that destroy features on the Earth’s surface

Page 7: Earthquake Vocabulary Notecards. Weathering Process of breaking down the Earth’s material by natural processes of water, wind, ice, and chemicals into.

Constructive vs. Destructive ForcesVenn Diagram•Weathering

• Erosion

•Deposition

• Earthquake

• Volcano

•Mountains

• Islands

• Sand Dune

•Canyon

•Delta

•Tsunami

•Flood

•Sandbar

• Landslides

•Glacier

Page 8: Earthquake Vocabulary Notecards. Weathering Process of breaking down the Earth’s material by natural processes of water, wind, ice, and chemicals into.

Focus• Point of origin underground where the rocks break producing vibrations and creating an earthquake

Earth’s Surface

Fault Line

DRAW

Page 9: Earthquake Vocabulary Notecards. Weathering Process of breaking down the Earth’s material by natural processes of water, wind, ice, and chemicals into.

Epicenter• Point above ground on the surface directly above the focus

Earth’s Surface

Fault Line

DRAW

Page 10: Earthquake Vocabulary Notecards. Weathering Process of breaking down the Earth’s material by natural processes of water, wind, ice, and chemicals into.
Page 11: Earthquake Vocabulary Notecards. Weathering Process of breaking down the Earth’s material by natural processes of water, wind, ice, and chemicals into.

You Need:• Clicker

• Checking Pen

• Bad Vibrations Worksheet

• Earthquake Vocabulary Notecards

Page 12: Earthquake Vocabulary Notecards. Weathering Process of breaking down the Earth’s material by natural processes of water, wind, ice, and chemicals into.

Compression• Force that squeezes rock or an object until it folds or breaks

Page 13: Earthquake Vocabulary Notecards. Weathering Process of breaking down the Earth’s material by natural processes of water, wind, ice, and chemicals into.

Tension• Force that occurs to stretch an object or rock

Page 14: Earthquake Vocabulary Notecards. Weathering Process of breaking down the Earth’s material by natural processes of water, wind, ice, and chemicals into.

Shear• Force that pushes a mass of rock or an object in opposite directions

Page 15: Earthquake Vocabulary Notecards. Weathering Process of breaking down the Earth’s material by natural processes of water, wind, ice, and chemicals into.

Fault Line Types•Normal Fault – blocks of crust are pulled away and one block falls down–Occurs at Divergent Boundary with Tension Force

•Reverse Fault – blocks of crust are pushed together and one block slides up–Occurs at Convergent Boundary with Compression

Force

• Strike-Slip Fault – blocks of crust slide past each other with no up or down motion–Occurs at Transform Boundary with Shear Force

Page 16: Earthquake Vocabulary Notecards. Weathering Process of breaking down the Earth’s material by natural processes of water, wind, ice, and chemicals into.

Normal Fault Pictures **Do NOT Copy**

blocks of crust are pulled away and one block falls down

Page 17: Earthquake Vocabulary Notecards. Weathering Process of breaking down the Earth’s material by natural processes of water, wind, ice, and chemicals into.

Reverse Fault Pictures **Do NOT Copy**blocks of crust are pushed together and one block slides up

Page 18: Earthquake Vocabulary Notecards. Weathering Process of breaking down the Earth’s material by natural processes of water, wind, ice, and chemicals into.

Strike-Slip Fault Pictures **Do NOT Copy**blocks of crust slide past each other with no up or down

motion

Page 19: Earthquake Vocabulary Notecards. Weathering Process of breaking down the Earth’s material by natural processes of water, wind, ice, and chemicals into.

Types of Seismic Waves• P-Wave (Primary) – first wave from the focus

–Push-pull wave that can travel through solids & liquids

–Fastest wave

• S-Wave (Secondary) – slow wave from the focus–Vibrates crust side to side & up or down–Travels only through solids

• Surface Wave – slowest wave from the epicenter–Come from P- & S-Waves that reach the surface–Produce most damage–Stronger near the epicenter

Page 20: Earthquake Vocabulary Notecards. Weathering Process of breaking down the Earth’s material by natural processes of water, wind, ice, and chemicals into.

Richter Scale•Measures strength of seismic waves on a seismograph

• Scale of 1-10–10 is the strongest–Each number is 10 times stronger than the

number before

Page 21: Earthquake Vocabulary Notecards. Weathering Process of breaking down the Earth’s material by natural processes of water, wind, ice, and chemicals into.

Richter Scale **Do NOT Copy**

Page 23: Earthquake Vocabulary Notecards. Weathering Process of breaking down the Earth’s material by natural processes of water, wind, ice, and chemicals into.
Page 24: Earthquake Vocabulary Notecards. Weathering Process of breaking down the Earth’s material by natural processes of water, wind, ice, and chemicals into.

Volcanoes VocabularyNotecards

Page 25: Earthquake Vocabulary Notecards. Weathering Process of breaking down the Earth’s material by natural processes of water, wind, ice, and chemicals into.

Magma•Molten rock found beneath the Earth’s surface

Page 26: Earthquake Vocabulary Notecards. Weathering Process of breaking down the Earth’s material by natural processes of water, wind, ice, and chemicals into.

Lava•Molten rock found on the Earth’s surface

Page 27: Earthquake Vocabulary Notecards. Weathering Process of breaking down the Earth’s material by natural processes of water, wind, ice, and chemicals into.

Tephra• Pyroclastic material of any size rock fragments, ash, and/or dust

Page 28: Earthquake Vocabulary Notecards. Weathering Process of breaking down the Earth’s material by natural processes of water, wind, ice, and chemicals into.

Viscosity•Measures the thickness of molten material

•High viscosity = thick

• Low viscosity = more fluid

Page 29: Earthquake Vocabulary Notecards. Weathering Process of breaking down the Earth’s material by natural processes of water, wind, ice, and chemicals into.

Volcano Activity Levels•Active – has erupted in recent time & can erupt again at any time–Look for Seismic Activity–Example: Mt. St. Helens

•Dormant – no eruption in recent time, but has a record of past eruptions–Example: Mt. Rainier in Washington

• Extinct – not known to have erupted in modern history or to ever erupt again–Example: Crater Lake

Page 30: Earthquake Vocabulary Notecards. Weathering Process of breaking down the Earth’s material by natural processes of water, wind, ice, and chemicals into.

Types of Volcanoes•Cinder Cone – small base with steep sides

–Made of Cinders–Explosive eruption

• Shield – large, wide base with gentle sloping sides–Calm lava flows

•Composite-Strato – tall, large, mountain-like volcano with snow cap–Alternating eruptions of lava & tephra–Explosive eruption

Page 31: Earthquake Vocabulary Notecards. Weathering Process of breaking down the Earth’s material by natural processes of water, wind, ice, and chemicals into.

Types of Lava•AA – hot, thin, fast flowing

–Hardens with a rough, jagged edge

• Pahoehoe – thicker, slow moving lava–Hardens with smooth, ropy appearance

• Pillow – forms when lava erupts & cools suddenly underwater

Page 32: Earthquake Vocabulary Notecards. Weathering Process of breaking down the Earth’s material by natural processes of water, wind, ice, and chemicals into.

Types of Volcanic Eruptions•Determined by amount of water vapor & gases and chemical composition of magma

• Explosive eruption – thick magma, high pressure/gas & water content–Example: Mt. St. Helens

•Quiet eruption – fluid magma, low gas pressure & water content–Example: Hawaiian Islands

Mt. Kilauea