chapter 2 review fire and ice washington’s geology

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Chapter 2 Review Fire and Ice Washington’s Geology

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Page 1: Chapter 2 Review Fire and Ice Washington’s Geology

Chapter 2Review

Fire and IceWashington’s

Geology

Page 2: Chapter 2 Review Fire and Ice Washington’s Geology

A Changing Land

Explain the term Continental Drift

Continents were joined together then drifted apart creating a narrow Atlantic Ocean. It widens three inches a year.

Page 3: Chapter 2 Review Fire and Ice Washington’s Geology

QUESTION…

What causes landmasses to move and the earth to fold and crack?

Tectonic forces, strong forces in the earth that cause landmasses to move and land ridges are forced upward.

Page 4: Chapter 2 Review Fire and Ice Washington’s Geology

Explain the term deluge, and how it affected Washington state?

Deluge means heavy rain. For over 2,000 years, these floods came every 50 to 60 years creating the Columbia River to swell eroding the landscape.

Page 5: Chapter 2 Review Fire and Ice Washington’s Geology

COAL…

What is coal, and why is it burned?

Fossil fuel. Burned to provide heat to boil water making steam to run generators producing electricity.

Page 6: Chapter 2 Review Fire and Ice Washington’s Geology

Forming Our Mountains

What are the oldest mountains in the west?

Rocky Mountains

The youngest are the Olympic Mountains. Before they became a mountain range what were they?

They were once off-shore islands.

Page 7: Chapter 2 Review Fire and Ice Washington’s Geology

MOUNTAINS

Name 3 of the 5 mountains that are considered the “sleeping giants”, and why are they called that?

Mt. Baker, Glacier Peak, Mt. Rainier, Mt. Adams, and Mt. St. Helens.

They are SLEEPNG GIANTS because they are dormant, temporarily inactive.

Page 9: Chapter 2 Review Fire and Ice Washington’s Geology

Name the mountain that most currently erupted in our state and what were the mudflows called?

Mt. Saint Helens. Lahars: huge mud flows containing boulders,

volcanic debris, and water.

Page 11: Chapter 2 Review Fire and Ice Washington’s Geology

Forming the Columbia Plateau

Repeated lava flows coming from what created the Columbia Plateau?

Fissures: long cracks in the earth’s crust.

Page 16: Chapter 2 Review Fire and Ice Washington’s Geology

Name three visible changes you can still see today that were caused by the great floods.

1. erratics 2. shape of the Puget Sound lowlands3. aquifers4. sculptured landscape of the Columbia

Plateau5. Grand Coulee6. Dry Falls7. cataracts

THE GREAT FLOODS…