Continental Drift & Seafloor Spreading

Continental Drift & Seafloor Spreading

9th - 12th Grade

•

46 Qs

quiz-placeholder

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Continental Drift & Seafloor Spreading

Continental Drift & Seafloor Spreading

Assessment

Quiz

•

Science

•

9th - 12th Grade

•

Practice Problem

•

Hard

•
NGSS
MS-ESS2-3, MS-ESS2-2, HS-ESS1-5

+3

Standards-aligned

Created by

Charles Martinez

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46 questions

Show all answers

1.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

1 min • 1 pt

The Mid-Ocean Ridge is a divergent fault on the floor of the Atlantic Ocean that helps explain continental drift. Which best describes where the oldest rock is on the floor of the Atlantic Ocean?

Next to the Mid-Atlantic Ridge on it's East side.

Next to the Mid-Atlantic Ridge on it's West side.

At the very center of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge

At the far edge of the ocean plate where it meets the continents

In the center of the oceans where it is still moving

Tags

NGSS.MS-ESS2-2

NGSS.MS-ESS2-3

2.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

15 mins • 1 pt

Media Image

At the Mid-Ocean Ridge and active volcanoes you can find:

fault lines

earthquakes

older crust

newest crust

Tags

NGSS.MS-ESS2-2

3.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

15 mins • 1 pt

A conveyor belt could be used as a model for:

where volcanoes are erupting

where continental plates meet oceanic plates

Where mantle convection cells are heated by the Earth's core

Where the thermal heat is lost at the surface

Where new crust is formed on the ocean floor

Tags

NGSS.MS-ESS2-2

NGSS.MS-ESS2-3

4.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

15 mins • 1 pt

Media Image

At which age strip in the picture will new crust form?

5

4

3

2

1

Tags

NGSS.MS-ESS2-1

5.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

15 mins • 1 pt

Media Image

The similarity of fossils on different continents is strong evidence for:

Continental drift and that land masses were once closer together

Continental drift and that land masses were once further apart

Plate tectonics theory of recycling crustal plates

Alfred Wegener's theory of continental drift and divergent species

Convection cells mixing the heat from the core to the surface of Earth

Tags

NGSS.MS-ESS2-3

6.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

15 mins • 1 pt

Media Image

Ferromagnetic molecules make up little shavings of iron that are in rock and align themselves to magnetic north when the rock is molten and liquid. Where do we find this?

Past the subduction zones where land and ocean plates collide

On either side of mid-ocean ridges

On the land under the Antarctic cap

In the layers of rock surrounding the Grand Canyon

In the convection cells of the mantle

Tags

NGSS.MS-ESS2-2

NGSS.MS-ESS2-3

7.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

15 mins • 1 pt

Where new magma comes up through the opening at the Mid Ocean Ridge then hardens, the little iron shavings are stuck facing magnetic north when the lava hardens into rock on either side of the ridge.

Plant fossils matching on two continents

Animal fossils matching on two continents

glacier scaring matching on two continents

rock formations matching on two continents

erosion matching on two continents

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