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Test Bank for Natural Hazards And Disasters 4th Edition by Donald Hyndman
Test Bank Chapter 2
Natural Hazards and Disasters, 4e Plate Tectonics and Physical Hazards
Chapter 2
PLATE TECTONICS AND PHYSICAL HAZARDS
MULTIPLE-CHOICE QUESTIONS
- What direction is the Pacific Plate currently moving, based on the chain of Hawaiian Islands with only the easternmost island active?
- to the northeast
- to the northwest
- to the southeast
- to the southwest
- It is not moving; the chain of islands is not related to the active one.
ANSWER: b
- Before people understood plate tectonics, what evidence led some scientists to believe in continental drift?
- Rocks on the ocean floor are oldest in the center, becoming progressively younger toward each continent.
- Rocks on the continents can be traced through the ocean floor to the other side.
- Anthropologists have found human carvings in Africa that match those in Brazil.
- Glaciers near the mouth of the Amazon River in Brazil carried distinctive rocks into South Africa, demonstrating that those countries were once connected.
- Ages of bedrock formations match across the Atlantic Ocean.
ANSWER: e
- Which of the following was NOT used as early evidence for continental drift?
- ages of bedrock formations that match across the Atlantic Ocean
- match of coastlines across the Atlantic Ocean
- match of rock formations across the Atlantic Ocean
- match of ages of continental rocks across the Atlantic Ocean
- the fact that the magnetic pole shifts from north to south
ANSWER: e
- Which of the following is true?
- The mantle is denser than the lithosphere.
- The lithosphere is denser than the mantle.
- The asthenosphere is the more rigid equivalent of the mantle.
- The asthenosphere is the more plastic part of the mantle.
- The mantle is everywhere more rigid than the crust.
ANSWER: d
- Which of the following is true?
- Oceanic rift zones are found only in the center of the oceans.
- Rift zones are found only in the ocean basins.
- Rift zones are areas where oceanic crust is formed.
- Rift zones are the oldest parts of the oceanic crust.
- Rift zones mark the boundaries between oceanic and continental crust.
ANSWER: c
- Which of the following is NOT true?
- Subduction zones are areas where ocean floor descends into the mantle.
- Subduction zone activity includes very large earthquakes.
- Subduction zone activity leads to active volcanoes.
- Subduction zones are areas where ocean floor rocks are formed.
- Subduction zones are marked as the deepest parts of the oceans.
ANSWER: d
- Which of the following is true?
- Transform faults show dominantly vertical movement.
- Transform faults are only in the ocean basins.
- Transform faults are areas of spreading and new crustal generation.
- Transform faults change with time from horizontal to vertical motion.
- Transform fault motion typically ends abruptly at both ends.
ANSWER: e
- What does oceanic lithosphere consist of?
- basalt on top of peridotite
- only basalt
- only peridotite
- basalt and peridotite in layers of variable thickness, in some places above, in others below
- partly basalt and partly granite
ANSWER: a
- Along which type of lithospheric plate boundaries are earthquakes common?
- only convergent (subduction zones)
- only divergent (spreading zones)
- only transform
- only divergent and transform
- convergent, divergent, and transform
ANSWER: e
10.Near which type of lithospheric plate boundary are andesite stratovolcanoes most common?
- rift zones on continents
- collision zones between continental plates
- subduction zones between oceanic and continental plates
- subduction zones between two continents
- transform fault boundaries between oceanic and continental plates
ANSWER: c
- Why does oceanic lithosphere almost always sink beneath continental lithosphere at convergent plate boundaries?
- Oceanic lithosphere moves so slowly that it can only sink.
- Oceanic lithosphere is at the bottom of the ocean, so it can’t float high enough to ride over a continent.
- Oceanic lithosphere is almost twice as dense as the underlying mantle.
- Oceanic lithosphere is denser than continental lithosphere.
- Oceanic lithosphere is partly liquid, so it floats on the solid continental lithosphere.
ANSWER: d
- If the Atlantic Ocean floor is getting wider, why is the Earth not becoming larger?
- Actually, the Atlantic Ocean floor is not getting wider.
- Old ocean floor sinks at subduction zones (trenches).
- It is becoming denser, so it takes up no more space.
- It becomes part of the edge of the adjacent continent.
- It melts at oceanic transform faults.
ANSWER: b
- Which of the following is true?
- Earth’s crust is denser than the mantle.
- Earth’s crust is thicker than the mantle.
- Earth’s crust is part of the asthenosphere and equivalent to it in composition.
- Earth’s crust is part of the mantle and forms the upper part of it.
- Earth’s crust is less dense than the mantle.
ANSWER: e
14.Why do many oceanic volcanoes occur as long lines of volcanoes that are active at only one end?
- The lithosphere moves over a stable hotspot in the mantle.
- The mantle convection cell under the crust carries the magma source from one end of the line of volcanoes to the other.
- The mantle plume that feeds the volcano rotates around the Earth’s core, tracing new volcanoes as it does.
- The spreading lithosphere pushes the underlying magma source across the ocean floor.
- The active volcanoes are gradually moving away from the oceanic ridge.
ANSWER: a
- The San Andreas Fault is:
- a normal fault.
- the subduction zone bordering the Pacific Plate.
- a rift zone running the length of California.
- a reverse fault.
- a transform fault.
ANSWER: e
- Along which type(s) of lithospheric plate boundary are basalt-flow eruptions abundant?
a. oceanic rift zones
b. continental rift zones
c. continental collision zones
d. transform faults
e. mantle plumes
ANSWER: a
- What is a transform fault characterized by?
- lithospheric plates sliding past each other
- the movement of one plate over another
- the movement of plates away from each other
- the movement of one plate down against another
- earthquakes but no plate movement
ANSWER: a
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