Earths Interior (2nd Summative Test)
Earths Interior (2nd Summative Test)
Earths Interior (2nd Summative Test)
2. Continental drift was not widely accepted when it was first proposed because ____.
b. continental landmasses were too big to move slowly over Earth’s surface
c. magnetic and sonar data proved that Wegener’s hypothesis was incorrect
3. The driving forces of tectonic plates are related to convection currents in Earth’s ____.
4. Wegener’s hypothesis of _____________ stated that Earth’s continents had once been
joined as a single landmass.
5. Which of the following glacial features were included in Wegener's list of evidence?
6. Before Pangaea, the continents and other land masses on Earth didn't even exist.
A) TRUE B) FALSE
7. Which of the following was the biggest problem with Wegener's Theory of Continental Drift?
9. What evidence found on Africa and South America supports the hypothesis of continental
drift?
c. glacial deposits
a. Ocean currents
b.Volcanoes
a. Ocean
b. Mantle
c. Outer core
d. Inner core
12. The fact that ice floats on top of water is like the fact that_________.
14. Why are there no P-waves or S-waves received in the P-wave shadow zone?
a. P-waves are absorbed and S-waves are refracted by Earth’s outer core.
b. P-waves are refracted and S-waves are absorbed by Earth’s outer core.
c. Both the P-waves and S-waves are refracted by Earth’s outer core.
d. Both the P-waves and S-waves are absorbed by Earth’s outer core.
16. Miners dig into the Earth in search for precious rocks and minerals. In which layer is the
deepest explorations made by miners?
a. Crust b. Mantle
17. How do you compare the densities of the Earth’s crust, mantle, and core?
a. The mantle is less dense than the core but denser than the crust.
b. The mantle is less dense than both the core and the crust.
c. The mantle is denser than the core but less dense than the crust.
d. The mantle is denser than both the core and the crust.
18. The movement of the lithospheric plates is facilitated by a soft, weak and plastic-like layer.
a. Asthenosphere b. Lithosphere
c. Atmosphere d. Mantle
19. Alfred Wegener is a German scientist who hypothesized that the Earth was once made up of
a single large landmass called Pangaea. Which of the following theories did Wegener propose?
20. If you are a cartographer, what will give you an idea that the continents were once joined?
21. Which observation was NOT instrumental in formulating the hypothesis of seafloor
spreading?
22. As a new seafloor is formed at the mid-ocean ridge, the old seafloor farthest from the ridge
is destroyed. Which of the stated processes describes how the oceanic crust plunges into the
23. Who were the two scientists who proposed the theory of seafloor spreading in the early
1960s?
a. Charles Darwin and James Hutton b. Harry Hess and Robert Dietz
deep ocean. What discovery about the ocean floor is associated with the seafloor spreading?
c. The crust of the continents is more dense than the crust of the ocean.
d. The crust of the ocean is very young relative to the age of the crust of the continents.
25. If the Atlantic Ocean is widening at a rate of 3 cm per year, how far (in kilometers) will it
a. 3 kilometers b. 30 kilometers
26. Which of the following increases with distance from a mid-ocean ridge?
27. Which of the following can you infer from the continuous movement of the lithospheric
c. The continents will not be located in the same place as they are now.
d. The islands of the Philippines will become scattered all over the world.
28. If all the inner layers of the Earth are firm solid, what could have happened to Pangaea?
a. It remained as a supercontinent.
b. It would have become as it is today.
29. Why does the oceanic crust sink beneath the continental crust at the subduction zone?
30. The lithospheric plates are believed to be moving slowly. What is the driving force that
31.In 1912, Alfred Wegener proposed a theory that the earth is once a single landmass. What is
the name of the Mesozoic Supercontinent that consisted of all of the present continents?
33. It is a body wave that forces the ground to move backward and forward as they are
a. 5 to 60 km b.10 to 50 km c.15 to 40 km d. 8 to 38 km
36. How does the convection currents within the aesthenosphere move?
b. solid rock
d. liquid rock
38. If you used an apple to model the layers of the Earth, which part would represent the
mantle?
PREPARED BY:
RENE L. LAURENTE
ANSWER SECTION:
1.D
2.A
3.C
4.B
5.A
6.B
7.A
8.D
9.D
10.D
11.B
12.C
13.D
14.B
15.B
16.A
17.A
18.A
19.A
20.C
21.B
22.D
23.B
24.B
25.B
26.D
27.C
28.A
29.C
30.C
31.C
32. B
33.A
34.A
35.A
36.B
37.C
38.A
39.A
40.C