Science 9 Final Exam Study GuideSpring 2013
The final exam, all multiple-choice, is worth 20% of your overall grade. The content tested on this exam includes all of your notes, handouts, and labs from the beginning of Term II. What follows is a guide only—things may appear on the exam that are not mentioned here specifically, and things may be mentioned here but may not appear on the exam.
Unit 6: Clues to the Past
Relative Dating Resources:
- Text: Section 12.1: Discovering Earth’s History p. 336
- Notes: Reading and Note-taking guide
- Labs/Activities: Law of Superposition, Determining Relative Ages of Rocks, Drawing Rock Diagrams/Rock Interpretation
- Handouts: How Can Rocks Fold? How Can the Earth’s Crust Break?
Relative Dating Key Concepts:
- Describe the difference between an anticline and a syncline
- Identify a reverse fault and a normal fault
- Describe the principle of uniformitarianism
- Describe the key principles of relative dating, including the Law of Superposition, the Principle of Orginal Horizontality, and the Principle of Cross-Cutting Relationships
- Explain what inclusions are and the role they play in the relative dating of rock layers
- Define an unconformity and describe the different types of unconformities, including angular unconformities, disconformities, and nonconformities.
- Be able to read the rock record in order to write the geologic history of an area.
Absolute Dating Resources:
A.Text: Section 12.3: Dating with Radioactivity p. 347
- Notes: Reading and Note-taking guide
- Labs/Activities: Half-life Property of a Radioactive Element, Geologic Time
- Handouts: Half-life problems
Absolute Dating Key Concepts:
1.Describe how radioactive decay of elements allows scientists to determine the absolute age of a rock or fossil
- Know the difference between a radioactive parent and its stable daughter product
- Describe radiocarbon dating and its limitations in determining the age of fossils
- Calculate the age of a fossil using the half-life of an element
- Interpret the geologic history of an area and determine the ages of rocks
Unit 5: Plate Tectonics
Continental Drift Resources:
- Text: Section 9.1: Continental Drift
- Notes: Continental Drift; timeline of the development of the idea of continental drift
- Labs: Creating Pangaea ; Mystery of Far-Flung Fossils
- Handouts: The Story Behind the Science: Continents—A Jigsaw Puzzle with No Mechanism; Evidence for Continental Drift (fill-in-the-blanks)
Continental Drift Key Concepts:
- Describe Wegener’s idea of continental drift.
- List and explain the evidence behind Wegener’s theory of continental drift. Be sure to explain how the evidence supports Wegener’s theory.
- Explain why Wegener’s fit of the continents was not perfect.
- Explain the criticism Wegener faced regarding his idea.
- Describe how and when the continent of Pangaea separated over time
- Describe the principle of uniformitarianism and how it refuted early ideas that explained similar coastlines
Structure of Inner Earth Resources:
- Text: Section 8.4: Earth’s layered Structure
- Notes: Structure of Inner Earth;
- Labs: Pizza Slice Earth
- Handouts: Do Now: How do we know of what our inner Earth consists; Inferred properties of Earth’s Interior
Structure of Inner Earth Key Concepts:
- Draw and label the different layers of inner Earth—know if they are solid/liquid and what they contain
- List the two types of crust and their relative densities
- Describe the differences between P-waves and S-waves
- Explain the data that leads to the inferences of what our inner Earth consists?
- Generally describe what happens to density, pressure and temperature as you descend toward the core.
Plate Tectonics Resources:
- Text: Section 9.2 Plate Tectonics, 9.3 Actions at Plate Boundaries and 9.4Testing Plate Tectonics
- Notes: Reading Guide
- Labs: Case of the Split Personality, Plate Boundaries Mapping Activity
Plate Tectonics Key Concepts:
- Explain the Theory of Plate Tectonics
- Explain how the theory of plate tectonics differs from the theory of continental drift
- Describe the final evidence that proved Wegener’s theory
- Describe the 3 different types of plate boundaries and what occurs at each type, including what occurs on the surface (remember there are 3 types of convergent plate boundaries and two types of divergent plate boundaries also).
- Give examples of where each type of plate boundary are found
- Explain how the Hawaiian Islands were formed
- Calculate the rate of plate movement.
- Explain what causes plates to move
Earthquakes and Volcanoes Resources:
- Text: 8.1 What is an Earthquake? 8.2 Measuring Earthquakes; 10.1 The Nature of Volcanic Eruptions; 10.3 Plate Tectonics and Igneous Activity
- Notes: Reading and Note-taking Guide; charts comparing magma types and volcano types, volcano notes
- Labs: Locating an Earthquake and Determining Magnitude; Magma Characteristics and Eruptions, Earthquakes/Volcanoes: Reading the Warning Signs, Volcanic Hazards, Virtual Earthquake; Determining How Fast Some Crustal Plates Move
- Handouts: travel-time curve, What determines the impact of an earthquake (online reading);
Earthquakes and Volcanoes Key Concepts
- Define an earthquake using the terms focus and epicenter
- Describe the relationship between earthquakes, volcanoes, and plate tectonics
- Compare the 3 types of seismic waves in terms of speed, arrival time, type of wave, and what material the wave travels through
- Identify the three major earthquake and volcanic zones
- List the factors that determine the impact of an earthquake on an area
- Explain what the Richter Scale is, what it is based upon, and what type of scale it is
- Describe the factors that affect the type of volcanic eruptions that take place
- Describe the relationship between chemical composition of magma and the type of eruption, including viscosity, silica content, dissolved gases
- Compare the three main types of volcanoes in terms of their size, their location, and the materials they eject
Unit 4: Soil
Soil Resources:
A. Text: Section 5.2 Soil
- Notes: Reading and note-taking guide for section 5.2; causes/effects/solutions to the Dust Bowl; types of soil conservation methods
- Labs: #4-Determining Soil Texture;
- Handouts: Soil profile; using a soil triangle; Surviving the Dust Bowl video guide; What caused drought in the 1930s and could it happen again; Weathering and Soil: The Dust Bowl; Humans and the Land; review worksheet: soil
Soil Key Concepts:
- Define soil in terms of it’s composition (what’s in it), texture, and structure.
- List and describe the factors that influence soil formation.
- Draw a soil profile, label the layers, and describe what is in each layer.
- List and explain the human activities that accelerate the rates of soil erosion.
- Calculate the texture of a soil sample given that the sand layer is 10 mm, the clay layer is 15 mm and the silt layer is 5 mm.
- Compare how different soils drain water.
- List the factors that contributed to the Dust Bowl and the effects of those factors.
- List and describe the soil conservation methods we discussed in class. Be sure to explain how these methods save or conserve soil.
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