| A | B | 
|---|
| The removal of soil by gravity, wind, and running water is called _____. | Erosion | 
| Rocks formed from the cooling and hardening of hot, molten magma or lava are called _____. | Igneous | 
| A rock that has changed from one type of rock to another by heat or pressure is a _____ rock.  These rocks might also have a swirled look. | Metamorphic | 
| What type of rock is limestone? | Sedimentary | 
| The slow movement of Earth's landmasses riding on continental and oceanic plates is called _____. | Continental Drift | 
| The instrument that measures vibrations of the Earth especially in an earthquake is called a _____. | Seismograph | 
| What causes movement of material within the Earth? | The Earth's heat energy | 
| The center of the Earth is called the _____. | Inner core | 
| The thinnest layer of the Earth is the outside layer called the _____. | Crust | 
| A large, slow moving mass of ice is called a _____. | Glacier | 
| When a tree is turned into stone over a period of years, the tree becomes a _____. | Fossil | 
| In which type of rock do fossils form? | Sedimentary | 
| When weathering changes the size and shape of rocks, this is called _____. | Physical Weathering | 
| When the minerals that make up a rock are changed, this is called _____. | Chemical Weathering | 
| As rocks change from one form to another and back again over many years, this is called the _____. | Rock Cycle | 
| A volcano that hasn't erupted in a while but still could, is _____. | Dormant | 
| Another name for molten rock beneath the surface of the Earth is _____. | Magma | 
| Which layer of the Earth is the hottest? | Inner core | 
| When plates of the Earth move and come together or slide past each other, what event takes place? | Earthquakes | 
| What type of boundary is formed where two tectonic plates come together? | Convergent Boundary | 
| Name three types of rocks. | Igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic | 
| How can sedimentary rock be changed into metamorphic rock? | Heat and pressure are added | 
| What are the four main layers of the Earth? | Crust, Mantle, Outer Core, and Inner Core | 
| Melted (molten) rock flowing from a volcano is callede _____. | Lava | 
| The crust of the Earth is made of _____. | Rock | 
| Metals that are taken from rock are called _____. | Ores | 
| A delta is a fan-shaped sediment deposit formed at the mouth of a river.  What process formed the delta? | Rocks were weathered into small pieces and were swept away by the water through erosing.  The size of the delta varies depending on the amount of erosion. | 
| What are some causes of erosion? | Wind and water | 
| What type of boundary is formed when tectonic plates move apart? | Divergent boundary | 
| Describe transform fault boundaries. | Transform fault boundaries occur when plates slip past each other horizontally. | 
| How are trenches, mid-ocean ridges, and mountain ranges formed? | By plate movement (past and present) | 
| What is weathering? | The breaking down of minerals and rocks into small pieces (sediments) | 
| Describe sedimentary rock. | Layers of sediment cemented together | 
| What do scientists use to provide information about life and conditions of the past? | Fossils | 
| The outer 2 layers of the Earth are composed primarily of _____ material. | Rocky | 
| The innermost layers of the Earth are mostly made of _____ and _____. | Iron and nickel | 
| As the depth beneath the surface of the Earth increases, the _____ increases. | Pressure | 
| The thickest layer of the Earth is the _____. | Mantle | 
| Which layer of the Earth is made of solid iron and nickel? | Inner core | 
| Which layer of the Earth is shaped like a basketball? | Inner core | 
| Why does a hillside with no plants erode faster than an area with a lot of plants? | Because plants, such as trees, help prevent or slow down erosion | 
| What is the weakest agent of erosion?  What is the strongest agent of erosion? | Wind (weakest)  Running water (strongest) | 
| What is the relationship between the size of a delta and erosion? | The larger the delta the greater the amount of erosion that has occurred. | 
| Deposition is _____. | The process of weathered material being put down in a new location as a result of erosion. | 
| The breaking down of rocks into smaller pieces is called _____. | Weathering |