Our site uses cookies. Some of the cookies we use are essential for parts of the site to operate and have already been set. You may delete and block all cookies from this site, but parts of the site will not work. To find out more about cookies on this website, see our Cookie Policy
Accept
© eRevision.uk and ZigZag Education 2024
This test is run by guest.
Note that your final mark will not be saved in the system.

EQ1: Why are some locations more at risk from tectonic hazards? GapFill

Target Level
C
Running Total
0
0%
Attempt
1 of 3

You must fill all the gaps before clicking ‘Check Answers!’

Earth’s core is hot.  Some of that heat is left over from when Earth was  destroyedformednearer the Sunin the Stone Age.  It just hasn’t escaped yet.  Some is generated by friction as material moves towards the core, and some  oxygenradioactiveradio wavehydrogen isotopes release heat as they decay.

Alfred Wegener, in 1912, published his theory that the  liquid layermantlecorecrust was made up of fragments which had moved around over time.  He wasn’t able to provide a scientific process to back up his theory so it didn’t catch on immediately.  He and others noticed that, give or take a bit of erosion, the continents seemed to fit together, and Wegener noticed patterns in the types of rock and  fossilsecosystemsoiltrees across the continents, meaning that the land on either side of oceans must have, at some point in time, been joined together.

In the 1940s,  mantlecrustlandsea-floor spreading was proposed as a mechanism for this continental drift, helping to validate Wegener’s theory.  Plates move apart at ocean ridges, and lava fills the gap and solidifies to rock.  It’s called pillow lava.  The iron in the rock aligns to Earth’s  influentialoceancompassmagnetic field as it cools, and stays that way.  Periodically throughout geological history, Earth’s magnetic field has switched polarity.  This means that bands of rock with alternating polarity are spread out on either side of mid-ocean  ridgeschannelsfaultsgyres.

The original theory of plate movement focused on  convectionradiativehotspotdecay currents.  Hotter parts of the mantle rise to the surface, hit the crust, spread out and sink.  As this happens, pressure is exerted, and the plates move  togethernowhereapartvertically.

More recently,  slabboundaryplumerock pull is thought to be a cause, whereby dense oceanic plates are pulled down (subducted) at  constructiveplumeconservativedestructive boundaries, pulling the whole plate down. In addition, ridge push occurs where material built up at ocean ridges is pushed downwards under gravity.

Sometimes, volcanoes are found away from plate boundaries.  These areas are called  warm spotshotspotssunspotscold spots, and they’re formed when a plume of hot magma melts through the crust and forms a volcano.  The plume stays in the same place, but the plate moves across it.  The volcanoes become inactive, and there are gaps as the plume takes a while to melt through again.  This is why  IcelandHawaiiMadagascarChesil Beach exists as a chain of islands.

There are several types of shockwave caused by earthquakes.  The  fourthfirstsecondfifth waves are primary waves (P waves) – they form compressions and expansions, causing the ground to  shakemove upwardsmove downwardsfracture.  Immediately afterwards are the secondary waves (S waves) – they move up and down and cause the shaking.  At the surface are two types of surface waves.  Love waves shake side to side, and Rayleigh waves are similar to ocean waves – they have a rolling motion.

This is your 1st attempt! You get 3 marks for each one you get right. Good luck!

Pass Mark
72%