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the envelope of gases that surrounds Earth; mostly N (78%) and O2 (21%) but contains at least nine other gases. |
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refers to full range of variability within the living world at all levels, including genomes, species, and ecosystems. The number of species in an area is commonly used as a measure of its biodiversity. |
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the number of people that Earth can support sustainably at a specified level of economic and social well-being (standard of living). |
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the four basic components of our planet: atmosphere, hydrosphere, geosphere, and biosphere. |
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very broadly defined to include all the physical and biological components involved in Earth systems interactions. |
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the rate of transfer of matter among systems. |
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the solid earth and all its parts, including molten parts within earth. |
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all the water in the oceans, lakes rivers, underground, and in the permanent ice accumulations. |
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tentative explanation that is consistent with all we know about a situation or problem. |
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nonrenewable resource (14) |
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one that is not being replenished as fast as it is being used. |
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one that will continue to be available because it is naturally replenished as fast as, or faster than, it is being consumed. |
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place where specified matter or energy is stored in a system. |
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the average amount of time that specified matter spends in a defined system reservoir. |
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systematic approach to exploring and explaining how the natural world operates. It is an interactive process of inquiry that involves acquiring data, formulating questions, devising hypotheses, making predictions from hypothesis, and carrying out observations to support or refute hypotheses. |
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system reservoir where matter has a very long residence time; they isolate matter from system interactions. |
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system in which the transfers of matter or energy in and out are approximately equal; as a result, the system appears not to change. |
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means something is capable of being continued with minimal long=term effect on the environment. In a human context, it means that the needs of the present generation are met without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their needs. |
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group of interacting, interrelated, or interdependent parts that together form a whole. |
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integrates a number of extensively tested hypotheses into a well-accepted unifying framework explains a large set of observations and relationships and has been verified independently by many researchers. |
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age, in years; how geologists know how long ago event have occurred. |
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a distinctive part of the upper mantle directly below the lithosphere (mostly solid, but pliable (like putty) and can flow under pressure) has also been called the upper mantle’s low velocity zone. |
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volcanic rock that the oceanic crust primarily consists of. |
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Continental crust: (p. 25) |
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the crust that makes up Earth’s landmasses and their shallowly submerged edges. |
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interior of Earth which contains two parts, the solid inner core and the liquid outer core. (solid=1.7% Earth’s mass, liquid=30.8% Earth’s mass) Both are made of mostly iron and nickel. |
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the outer “skin” of Earth. (Only 43 miles thick). |
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interval in which the geologic time scale divides Earth’s history (four parts). |
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remains and indications of former life that are preserved in rocks. |
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Fossil succession: (P. 45) |
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when a fossil changes from lower to upper parts of a sequence or form one sequence to another in regular ways. |
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scale used for periods of time long enough to allow us to understand Earth’s history. |
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Geologic time scale: (p. 45) |
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scale that summarizes Earth’s geologic history as determined from studies of rocks, fossils, and other relative ages. |
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formed when winter snow doesn’t melt completely in the summer; as snow accumulates, it becomes thicker and compresses to ice in glaciers. |
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a rock, typical of continental crust, containing calcium, sodium, potassium, aluminum, silicon, and oxygen. |
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carbon dioxide, methane, and water vapor |
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the time it takes for half of the isotope’s atoms to decay. |
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glaciers that coalesce and cover greater than square 50,000 square kilometers. |
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gas molecules that change into particles when solar radiation is intense. |
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atoms of an element that have different atomic masses. |
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molten rock on Earth’s surface. |
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the shallowest physical layer in the geosphere. Made up of strong, rigid rocks that can break when they move (oceanic crust, continental crust, and top portion of the underlying upper mantle crust) |
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molten rock within the geosphere. |
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times when a large number of species become extinct. |
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this makes up 67.1% of Earth’s total mass, most of Earth’s interior consists of the mantle. (mostly magnesium, silicon, oxygen, and iron) |
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the layer above the stratosphere. |
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Term
Mohorovičić discontinuity (Moho): (p. 26) |
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Definition
Upper mantle which lies above the transition zone and extends upward to the base of the crust. Name from Anrdija Mohorovičić (Croatian seismologist, first discovered in 1909) |
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Natural selection: (p. 41) |
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Definition
process which Darwin and Wallace’s sought to explain of how life changed overtime. |
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crust which underlines the oceans. |
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single oxygen atoms bond with O2 molecules to form ozone. |
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Definition
small amounts of ozone are concentrated in the lower stratosphere where it is not destroyed as rapidly. |
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process (used by Photosynthetic organisms) in which sunlight converts carbon dioxide and water into food and oxygen. |
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Radiometric dating: (p. 47) |
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radioactive carbon can be used to date organic material from a few hundred to about 60,000 years old. |
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indicates whether particular rocks were older or younger than others. |
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the layer above the troposphere. Temperatures increase upward through the stratosphere. |
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lowest atmospheric layer defined by temperature variations. Temperatures decrease from Earth’s surface upward to the top of the troposphere, where temperatures become constant in a boundary zone called the tropopause. |
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the outer atmospheric layer, above the mesosphere.
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apparent polar wander curve: (57) |
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the changes in location of the magnetic poles over time. |
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process of drifting that is what explains why the continents are now separated instead of being all together still. |
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part of a continent, especially the submerged part (the continental rise, slope, and shelf), adjacent to oceanic crust. |
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convergent plate boundary: (68) |
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Definition
regions where two places move toward each other. |
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divergent plate boundary: (66) |
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Definition
regions where two plates move away from each other. |
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places where rock has broken and the blocks on the opposite sides of the break have moved relative to each other. |
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groups of fossil species found together. |
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India, Australia, South Africa, and South America used to have connecting “land-bridges” (fingers of land). The five continents and their land-bridges were once called this. |
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formed in oceans; because they commonly have an “arc” shape. |
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magnetic fields leave a pattern on the sea floor that resembles strips. |
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when the magnetic field is reversed (pointing south instead of north) |
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inclined breaks in the lithosphere where the upper block of rock has moved down relative to the lower block. |
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remnant magnetism in the rock that tells sciences its location relative to Earth’s magnetic poles when the mineral formed. |
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the “supercontinent” of North America and Europe as presented by Wagner. Pangaea is Greek for “all land.” |
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plate (lithospheric plate, tectonic plate): (63) |
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Definition
a discrete piece of lithosphere that moves relative to other pieces. Tectonic plates are in motion and move several centimeters (a few inches) per year.
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dynamic geosphere processes of plates (irregularly shaped pieces that break the lithosphere up) moving relative to each other, colliding head-on, sliding past each other, or sinking into Earth’s interior. (“tectonics” comes from the Greek “tekton” meaning “builder.”) |
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Definition
faults commonly associated with subduction; inclined break in the lithosphere where the upper block of rock has moved up relative to the lower block. |
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ridge (oceanic ridge, mid-ocean ridge): (58) |
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Definition
raised seafloor (similar to seams on a baseball) |
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Definition
place where crust is extending and breaking apart; along rift hot material in mantle rises and overlying crust thins and weakens as it is warmed and stretched. |
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steep banks caused by surface movements |
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movement of newly formed oceanic crust away from mid-ocean ridges. |
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when blocks slide horizontally past each other. |
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the process where the lithosphere sinks into the mantle. |
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subsurface zone of faulting. |
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low angle reverse fault; surface along where blocks of rock move has low inclination. |
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Definition
faults that convert or “transform” the motions along adjacent converging or diverging plate boundaries into lateral sliding. |
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transform plate boundary: (70) |
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Definition
boundary in which two plates slide past one another on when they are not diverging or converging. |
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trench (oceanic trench): (58) |
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Definition
descended oceanic floor (10 kilometers/6 miles deep) |
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formed on continental crust; name because they form an “arc” |
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