A | B |
aa | a slow-moving type of lava that hardens to form rough, jagged chunks |
active | said of a volcano that is erupting or has shown signs of erupting in the near future |
aftershock | an earthquake that occurs after a larger earthquake in the same area |
asthenosphere | the soft layer of the mantle on which the lithosphere floats |
basalt | a dark, dense igneous rock with a fine texture, found in oceanic crust |
caldera | the large hole at the top of a volcano formed when the roof of a volcano's magma chamber collapses |
cinder cone | a steep, cone-shaped hill or mountain made of volcanic ash, cinders and bombs piled up around a volcano's opening |
composite volcano | a tall, cone-shaped mountain in which layers of lava alternate with layers of ash and other volcanic materials; also known as a stratovolcano |
convergent boundary | a plate boundary where two plates move TOWARD each other |
crater | a bowl-shaped area that forms around a volcano's central opening |
crust | the layer of rock that forms Earth's outer surface |
divergent boundary | a plate boundary where two plates move AWAY from each other |
dormant | said of a volcano that does NOT show signs of erupting in the near future |
earthquake | the shaking that results from the movement of rock beneath Earth's surface |
epicenter | the point on Earth's surface directly above an earthquake's focus |
extinct | said of a volcano that is unlikely to erupt again |
fault | a break in Earth's crust where slabs of rock slip past each other |
geology | the study of the structure and composition of planet Earth |
hot spot | an area where magma from deep within the mantle melts through the crust above it |
igneous rock | a type of rock that forms from the cooling of molten rock at or below Earth's surface |
inner core | a dense sphere of solid iron and nickel in the center of Earth |
lava | liquid magma that reaches the surface; also the rock formed when liquid lava hardens |
liquefaction | the process by which an earthquake's violent movement suddenly turns loose soil into liquid mud |
lithosphere | a rigid layer made up of the uppermost part of the mantle and the crust |
magma chamber | the pocket beneath a volcano where magma collects |
mantle | the layer of hot, solid material between Earth's crust and core |
Mercalli scale | a scale that rates earthquakes according to their intensity and how much damage they cause |
metamorphic rock | a type of rock that forms from an existing rock that is changed by heat, pressure or chemical reactions |
mid-ocean ridge | the undersea mountain chain where new ocean floor is produced; a divergent plate boundary |
ore | rock that contains a metal or economically useful mineral |
outer core | a layer of molten iron and nickel that surrounds the inner core of Earth |
P wave | Primary wave; a type of seismic wave that compresses and expands the ground |
pahoehoe | a hot, fast-moving type of lava that hardens to form smooth, ropelike coils |
pangaea | the name of the single landmass that broke apart about 200 million years ago and gave rise to today's continents |
plate | a section of the lithosphere that slowly moves over the asthenosphere, carrying pieces of the continental and oceanic crust |
pyroclastic flow | the expulsion of ash, cinders, bombs and gases during an explosive volcanic eruption |
Richter scale | a scale that rates seismic waves as measured by a particular type of mechanical seismograph |
S wave | Secondary wave;a type of seismic wave that moves the ground up and down and side to side |
sediment | small, solid particles of material from rocks and organisms which are moved by water or wind |
sedimentary rock | a type of rock that forms from particles from other rocks or the remains of plants and animals that are pressed and cemented together |
shield volcano | a wide, gently sloping mountain made of layers of lava and formed by quiet eruptions |
silica | a material that is formed from the elements oxygen and silicon; silica is found in magma and sand |
subduction | the process by which oceanic crust sinks beneath a deep-ocean trench and back into the mantle at a convergent plate boundary |
transform boundary | a plate boundary where two plates move past each other in opposite directions; an example is the San Andreas Fault |
trench | a deep canyon in the ocean floor |
volcano | a weak spot in the crust where magma has come to the surface |