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EMP - Chapter 4 Study Guide

Multiple Choice
Identify the letter of the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question.
 

 1. 

The youngest rocks on the ocean floor are located ____.
a.
near continents
c.
far from mid-ocean ridges
b.
at mid-ocean ridges
d.
near Asia
 

 2. 

The crust and upper mantle make up Earth's ____.
a.
lithosphere
c.
core
b.
asthenosphere
d.
continents
 

 3. 

Scientists have observed that the plates move at rates ranging from 1 cm to 12 cm per ____.
a.
century
c.
day
b.
decade
d.
year
 

 4. 

Plates of the lithosphere float on the ____.
a.
crust
c.
core
b.
asthenosphere
d.
atmosphere
 

 5. 

The presence of the same ____ on several continents supports the hypothesis of continental drift.
a.
fossils
c.
neither a nor b
b.
rocks
d.
both a and b
 

 6. 

The hypothesis that continents have slowly moved to their current locations is called ____.
a.
continental drift
c.
magnetic reversal
b.
continental slope
d.
convection
 

 7. 

Plates move apart at ____ boundaries.
a.
convergent
c.
divergent
b.
stable
d.
transform
 

 8. 

The alignment of iron minerals in rocks when they are formed reflects the fact that Earth's ____ has reversed itself several times in the past.
a.
magnetic field
c.
asthenosphere
b.
core
d.
gravity
 

 9. 

A lack of explanation for continental drift prevented many scientists from accepting that a single supercontinent called ____ once existed.
a.
Glomar
c.
Pangaea
b.
Glossopteris
d.
Wegener
 

 10. 

The Glomar Challenger provided support for the theory of plate tectonics by providing ____.
a.
high-altitude photos of existing continents
b.
samples of plant life from mid-ocean ridges
c.
samples of older rock found far from mid-ocean ridges
d.
direct measurements of the movement of continents
 

 11. 

Plates slide past one another at ____.
a.
subduction zones
c.
convection currents
b.
transform boundaries
d.
divergent boundaries
 

 12. 

The boundary between two plates moving together is called a ____.
a.
divergent boundary
c.
transform boundary
b.
convergent boundary
d.
lithosphere
 

 13. 

Seafloor spreading occurs because ____.
a.
new material is being added to the asthenosphere
b.
earthquakes break apart the ocean floor
c.
sediments accumulate at the area of spreading
d.
molten material beneath Earth's crust rises to the surface
 

 14. 

Continental drift states that continents have moved ____ to their current location.
a.
vertically
c.
quickly
b.
slowly
d.
very little
 

 15. 

Wegener believed that the continents originally broke apart about ____ years ago.
a.
200 million
c.
400 million
b.
300 million
d.
500 million
 

 16. 

A fossil plant that helps support the theory of continental drift is ____.
a.
Mesosaurus
c.
Glomar
b.
Glossopteris
d.
Pangaea
 

 17. 

Matching ____ on different continents are evidence for continental drift.
a.
river systems
c.
weather patterns
b.
rock structures
d.
wind systems
 

 18. 

Bands of rock on the seafloor showing alternating magnetic orientation indicate Earth's magnetic field has ____.
a.
reversed itself in the past
c.
become stronger
b.
weakened
d.
remained the same
 

 19. 

____ currents inside Earth might drive plate motion.
a.
Vertical
c.
Horizontal
b.
Convection
d.
none of the above
 

 20. 

Scientists believe that differences in ____ cause hot, plasticlike rock in the asthenosphere to rise toward Earth's surface.
a.
density
c.
weight
b.
magnetism
d.
composition
 

 21. 

The Great Rift Valley in Africa is a ____.
a.
mid-ocean ridge
c.
convergent boundary
b.
divergent boundary
d.
transform boundary
 

 22. 

Active volcanoes are most likely to form at ____.
a.
transform boundaries
b.
divergent boundaries
c.
the center of continents
d.
convergent oceanic–continental boundaries
 

 23. 

____ are formed when two continental plates collide.
a.
Volcanoes
c.
Mountain ranges
b.
Strike-slip faults
d.
Rift valleys
 

 24. 

A ____ forms where two oceanic plates collide.
a.
hot spot
c.
transform boundary
b.
subduction zone
d.
rift valley
 
 
french4_files/i0260000.jpg
Figure 4F-1
 

 25. 

According to Figure 4F-1, what type of plate boundary occurs between the North American Plate and the Eurasian Plate?
a.
transform boundary
b.
divergent boundary
c.
convergent oceanic-continental plate boundary
d.
convergent oceanic-oceanic plate boundary
 

 26. 

According to Figure 4F-1, what type of plate boundary occurs between the Nazca Plate and the South American Plate?
a.
convergent oceanic-continental plate boundary
b.
convergent oceanic-oceanic plate boundary
c.
convergent continental-continental plate boundary
d.
transform boundary
 

Matching
 
 
Match each term with the correct statement below.
a.
mid-ocean ridge
d.
subduction zone
b.
convergent boundary
e.
continental drift
c.
asthenosphere
 

 27. 

Earth's thick, plasticlike layer is the _____.
 

 28. 

Plates move together at a(n) _____.
 

 29. 

One plate is forced under another in a(n) _____.
 

 30. 

A(n) _____ is an underwater mountain chain.
 

 31. 

The main points of evidence for _____ are fossils, rocks, and climate.
 

Short Answer
 

 32. 

What is the difference between a convergent and a divergent plate boundary?
 



 
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