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Lesson 4.7 Investigating Sea Floor Spreading CP

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Last updated 12 months ago
19 questions
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We are going to use this formative to collect your answers to the Investigating Seafloor Spreading Activity from Concord Consortium. You can get to this activity by following this link.
https://learn.concord.org/eresources/2842.run_resource_html

The easiest way to do this activity is to open the activity in a separate window on your computer. Be sure that you play with the simulators as you work through the questions. The animations are really helpful in understanding what the evidence from the sea floor is suggesting has been happening in the oceans.
Question 1
1.

Why do you think scientists wanted to have a map of the seafloor? How could that help them better understand the Earth?

Question 2
2.

Describe the terrain (the stretch of land and the physical features) of the ocean floor from west (left side of graph) to east (right side of graph).

Question 3
3.
Drag the labels to the correct parts of the graph of the seafloor.
Other Answer Choices:
Mountain
Plains
Crater
Question 4
4.

Draw a line that traces the large mountain range along the ocean floor of the Northern Atlantic Ocean. The yellow line shows where the data in the previous graph was measured.

Question 5
5.

What type (or types) of rock make up the ocean floor underneath the sediment layer?

Question 6
6.

How are the rock types in the oceans different from the continents?

Question 7
7.

Draggable itemarrow_right_altCorresponding Item
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Question 8
8.

Question 9
9.

Compare the graph of ocean floor shape and to the graph of rock ages. How does the pattern of rock ages relate to the topography on the seafloor?

Question 10
10.

Question 11
11.

Describe the types of rocks and the crust ages that are found near magma forming in the model.

Question 12
12.

Question 13
13.

What could explain the relationship between the crust age and the volcanic eruptions in the model?

Question 14
14.

On the picture, use the drawing tools to indicate which areas have the oldest rocks on the seafloor.

Question 15
15.

Question 16
16.

How does the model explain the rock ages on both sides of volcanic mountain ridge shown on the map of the Atlantic at the top of the page?

Question 17
17.

Look at the rock ages in the yellow squares in the Atlantic Ocean vs. the Pacific Ocean. Describe the similarities and differences that you see.

Question 18
18.

Question 19
19.

Sum it up! Use two to three sentences to explain how evidence from oceanic rocks can reveal evidence of processes happening inside the Earth.

Match the longitude with the age of the rocks on the ocean floor.
-15 degrees
147 million years
-70 degrees
152 million years
-30 degrees
149 million years
-55 degrees
76 million years
-42 degrees
158 million years
Rock ages across the Atlantic Ocean are
a randomly scattered mix of ages
youngest on the edges and oldest in the middle
oldest on the edges and youngest in the middle
the same age all the way across
In the TecRocks model above, change the Map Type to "Crust Age" and click on "Keys and Options" to see the key for rock ages under the Map Type tab.
What color are the youngest rocks?
yellow
orange
purple
blue
Based on what you see in the model, what is causing the mountains in the center of the ocean to form?
Ocean currents
Fault blocks moving up (part of the crust being pushed up)
volcanoes
The rocks in the spots with the red markers are _____ near the volcanic mountain ridge, and they are _____ when they move farther away.
young/old
old/young
young/young
old/old
The rock ages in the yellow squares indicate that:
the Atlantic Ocean rocks are all older than the Pacific Ocean.
the Pacific Ocean volcanic ridge is spreading faster than the Atlantic Ocean.
the Pacific Ocean volcanic ridge is spreading slower than the Atlantic Ocean.
both oceans are spreading from the volcanic ridges at the same rate.