1 / 100

Are You Smarter Than an Oak Forest 5 th Grader?

Are You Smarter Than an Oak Forest 5 th Grader?. Earth Science. NATURAL RESOURCES. WEATHERING AND EROSION. EARTH. HISTORY. SOLAR SYSTEM. VARIETY. 10 Point. 10 Point. 10 Point. 10 Point. 10 Point. 10 Point. 20 Points. 20 Points. 20 Points. 20 Points. 20 Points. 20 Points.

homer
Download Presentation

Are You Smarter Than an Oak Forest 5 th Grader?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Are You Smarter Than an Oak Forest 5th Grader? Earth Science

  2. NATURAL RESOURCES WEATHERING AND EROSION EARTH HISTORY SOLAR SYSTEM VARIETY 10 Point 10 Point 10 Point 10 Point 10 Point 10 Point 20 Points 20 Points 20 Points 20 Points 20 Points 20 Points 30 Points 30 Points 30 Points 30 Points 30 Points 30 Points 40 Points 40 Points 40 Points 40 Points 40 Points 40 Points 50 Points 50 Points 50 Points 50 Points 50 Points 50 Points

  3. Correct!

  4. Which of these are natural resources? • fossil fuels, rocks, water • soil, water, plastic • rocks, trees, bricks • fossil fuels, plastic, trees A B C D

  5. Try Again

  6. Which are renewable resources? • trees, cows, bricks • trees, water, soil • air, grass, coal • concrete, water, air A B C D

  7. Try Again

  8. Which are nonrenewable resources? • trees, coal, rocks • trees, water, soil • oil, rocks, coal • rocks, water, air A B C D

  9. Try Again

  10. What do scientists call the decaying plant and animal matter in soil? • disgusting • bio-waste • humus • decomposers A B C D

  11. Try Again

  12. Fossil fuels formed over time when heat and pressure was applied to what? • sediments • magma • minerals that eroded from rocks • ancient plants and animals A B C D

  13. Try Again

  14. What is erosion? • constructive force • destructive force • magnetic force • natural resource A B C D

  15. Try Again

  16. Which is not a type of erosion? • wind • wave • warmth • glacier A B C D

  17. Try Again

  18. What type of weathering involves damage from water, wind, ice, or gravity? • mechanical • chemical • industrial • international A B C D

  19. Try Again

  20. Which are examples of constructive forces? • Deltas and earthquakes • Volcanoes and deposition • Fault lines and rivers • Mountains and glaciers A B C D

  21. Try Again

  22. Water often carries minerals it picks up from rocks. As it moves it deposits the minerals. Which of these is formed by this process? • Valleys and canyons • Canyons and caves • Sedimentary rocks • Stalagmites and stalactites A B C D

  23. Try Again

  24. What is the major source of energy for the Earth? • The Sun • Nuclear reactors • Plants • electricity A B C D

  25. Try Again

  26. How many high tides occur each day? • one • two • three • 24 A B C D

  27. Try Again

  28. What causes the tides? • Centrifugal force from Earthrotating • Melting glaciers • Salt dissolving in the ocean water • Gravitational pull of the moon A B C D

  29. Try Again

  30. What is fog? • Carbon dioxide in the air • An optical illusion • A cloud formed on the ground • Air pollution that sinks to the ground A B C D

  31. Try Again

  32. During the day land heats up faster than water and at night it cools down faster. This causes a difference in the air temperature over the land and the water which causes what? • weathering • breezes • precipitation • transpiration A B C D

  33. Try Again

  34. Dendrochronology is the study of tree rings. What information can we get from tree rings? • How old the tree was when it was cut down • What the weather was like while the tree was alive • Which years had droughts • All of the above A B C D

  35. Try Again

  36. Where do we usually find the youngest fossils? • South America • In igneous rocks • Closer to the surface • Deeper down A B C D

  37. Try Again

  38. What is a trace fossil? • The remains of a prehistoric trace • A clue that leads geologists to fossils • An imprint that was left by prehistoric organisms • A model made from a real fossil A B C D

  39. Try Again

  40. In which type of rocks are fossils usually found? • igneous • sedimentary • metamorphic • shiny A B C D

  41. Try Again

  42. The deeper down a paleontologist digs, the fossils are most likely what? • broken • newer • older • from plants A B C D

  43. Try Again

  44. A moon rock weighs more on Earth, but it has the same mass. Why? • The rock weathers when it is transportedfrom the moon to earth • It is difficult to get accurate measurements on the moon • Weight is a measurement of gravitational pull • Mass is a measurement of gravitational pull A B C D

  45. Try Again

  46. What do we call the measurement of one complete rotation of a planet? • revolution • circumference • a year • a day A B C D

  47. Try Again

  48. Earth is tilted on its axis and the rays of the Sun strike it at an angle. What does this cause? • seasons • solar eclipse • sunspots • solar flares A B C D

  49. Try Again

  50. What is found on the Earth and the moon? • water and air • atmosphere and dust • rocks and oxygen • valleys and dust A B C D

More Related