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Semester 1 Exam Study Guide Key
Scientific Method:
- Steps of the scientific method
State the question, collect info, form hypothesis, test, record data, draw conclusion
- Variables: identify controls, independent and dependent
Controls- do not change, ind-changed by the scientist, dep-changes in response to independent variable
Measurement:
- Identify science tools (meter stick/ruler, graduated cylinder, balance)
Graduated Cylinder- Volume
Meter stick/ruler- length
Balance- mass
- List the 3 units for each type of measurement
Length: Meters, cm, mm – Volume: Liters, mL – Mass: Grams, kg, mg
- Define/describe mass, volume, length, density
Mass- amount of material in an object. Volume-amount of space object takes up. Length- the distance from one point to another. Density-mass per unit volume.
Earth’s interior:
- Identify the layers of the earth and label (#’s go clockwise)
Crust(2), Mantle(3), Core(4), Asthenosphere(5), Lithosphere(1)
- Compare and contrast oceanic and continental crust
Oceanic-basalt, more dense, thinner. Cont-granite, less dense, thicker
- What is a seismic wave?
Energy released by an earthquake that travels through the earth
- What is a seismograph?
Tool used to measure the amount of energy released by an earthquake
- Explain what seismic waves tell us about Earth’s interior
Speed up in more dense substances and slow down in less dense. P waves can travel through the core, but they bend, S waves are blocked by the liquid core. This creates a Shadow Zone.
Earthquakes/Volcanoes:
- Know the parts of an earthquake (fault, epicenter, focus)
Fault-plane where the rock breaks. Epicenter-point above the focus on Earth’s surface. Focus-point within earth where the earthquake takes place
- Identify the 3 types of seismic waves and how they move
P-Waves move back and forth. S-Waves move at right angles to direction. Surface Waves move in a side-to-side swaying motion.
- Which waves can go through liquids or solids?
P Waves
- Explain the Ring of Fire.
Plate boundaries around the Pacific Ocean where there are many volcanoes and earthquakes
- What is a hot spot? Give an example.
Hot spot is an area of the mantle which is hotter than the surrounding areas, causes magma to rise up through crust – Hawaii
Continental Drift:
- Whose idea was it?
Wegener
- What is the idea of continental drift?
Continents are moving across the Earth’s surface.
- What was the name of the large landmass when continents were joined together?
Pangaea
Plate Tectonics:
- What does the theory explain?
How plates move
- What are the convection currents?
Currents within the mantle which move around when heated and cooled
- Where do convection currents take place inside the Earth and which layer of the Earth produces the heat that moves them? Asthenosphere, Heat comes from core
- Heat rises in the mantle because it is __LESS__ dense and sinks because it’s MORE dense
- What do we call the large sections of the Earth’s crust? Know that they are part of the lithosphere which includes oceanic and continental crust. Plates
- What is a plate boundary? Know the 3 types (convergent, divergent, transform)
Place where plates meet; Convergent- coming together. Divergent- moving apart. Transform-side by side
- Geologic activities such as mountains are formed at convergent boundaries. Earthquakes are formed at all boundary types, and volcanoes occur along divergent and convergent boundaries.
- Based on the following boundaries, list if lithosphere (crust) is created, destroyed, or neither:
Convergent- destroyed, neither. Divergent- created. Transform- neither.
Sea Floor Spreading:
- Explain what happens during this process.
Plates move apart under the ocean floor
- What type of boundary does it occur along? Why?
Divergent. Plates are moving apart due to convection currents
- Explain if crust is created, destroyed, or neither during this process.
Created
- Explain why oceanic crust sinks beneath continental crust.
It is more dense
- If plates are spreading apart, why doesn’t the Earth continue to get larger and larger?
It is subducted/ destroyed on the other side of the Earth.
Natural Resources:
- What is a natural resource?
Resources which are created naturally by the Earth.
- Difference between renewable and non-renewable resources; examples of each
Renewable: Within a lifetime it can be recreated.
Nonrenewable: Fossil Fuels, Renewable: Solar Energy
- What is an ore, mineral, fossil fuel
Ore: Can be mined for a profit.
Mineral: Non-living, solid materials found in nature.
Fossil Fuel: From living things and can be used for energy.
- 3 types of fossil fuels: Coal, Oil and Natural Gas. Coal is formed from buried plants, oil is formed from buried, tiny marine plants and animals (plankton).
Minerals:
- Characteristics of a mineral (be able to define each)
Non-organic, solid, crystalline structure, hardness, luster, transparency, color, streak, etc.
- List the different tests used to identify a mineral and label them as physical or chemical (be able to explain each).
Phy: Crystals, Cleavage/Fracture, color, Streak, luster, hardness, transparency.
Chem: Fluorescence, reaction to acid, and ability to burn.
- What is the Moh’s hardness scale
Determine hardness by scratching one mineral against another.
Rocks:
- 3 types of rock
Sedimentary, Metamorphic, and igneous.
- 3 ways to classify a rock
What it’s made of, how it is formed, and crystal size.
- How does igneous rock form? Give 2-3 examples.
Cooling magma/lava. Granite, Kimberlite, obsidian
- Contrast the two main types of igneous rock (intrusive vs. extrusive).
Int: Forms inside the Earth. Ext: Forms outside of the Earth.
- How does metamorphic rock form? Examples
Heat and Pressure. Gneiss, marble, garnet schist
- Constrast the two main types of metamorphic rock (foliated vs. non-foliated)
Foliated: Bands Non: No bands, tiny crystals.
- How does sedimentary rock form? Examples
Broken pieces compacted together. Conglomerate, sandstone, travertine.
- What is the rock cycle?
Shows how a rock can change from one type to another.
Fossils:
- What is a fossil? Remains or traces of prehistoric organisms.
- List the main types of fossils and how they form
Trace-footprint, cast- copy of shape, mold- cavity left, permineralized/ petrified-water and minerals flowing through mold, Preserved/ original remains- stuck in ice/ amber/ tar, carbon- stamp of carbon on rock.
- What type of rock do most fossils form in?
Sedimentary
- Which fossil provides clues about the activities of an organism?
Trace
- What is the difference between a mold and cast fossil?
A mold is the empty cavity. A cast is the copy of the shape of the organism.
- What is an index fossil?
A fossil used for dating because it lived for a short time, it was abundant, and geographically widespread.
- Contrast relative dating v. absolute (carbon) dating.
Relative Age / Absolute Age
Age in comparison to the age of other things. / The number of years since the rock or organism formed.
METHOD: Uses principle of superposition. / METHOD: Uses amount of Carbon (in once-living things).
Adaptations
- Give 4 examples of structural adaptations of animals.
Warning coloration, mimicry, protective coloration, and body parts.
- Give 4 examples of behavioral adaptations of animals.
Building a nest, building a dam, playing dead, and migration.
- How does natural selection lead to evolution?
The organisms that are better suited to the environment will survive and reproduce.
- What defines the members of a species?
Similar organisms which are able to reproduce.
- List 1 natural and one human cause of an extinction of a species? ___N:climate change, natural disasters__ ___H:deforestation, pollution, hunting_.
- An organisms coloring or body parts are examples of _structural_ adaptations.
- A moth caterpillar looks like a snake to protect itself is an example of __mimicry__ adaptations.
- A snake showing it is poisonous by exhibiting bright red and yellow coloring is an example of __warning coloration___ adaptations.