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Grades 9 and 10 - Chemistry - High School - Chemistry - Earth's Crust
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The Earth has a layered structure, from the core at its center, then the mantle above the core, and finally the outer layer, the crust which is divided into several tectonic plates. The crust provides a lot of the raw materials that are used to make things we use and take for granted every day, such as metals, stones and oil. The surface of the Earth is slowly changing but these geological changes are slow, taking tens of thousands of years to become noticeable. The changes are caused by plate tectonics and weathering. As mentioned before, the Earth's crust is broken into large plates. These... Show more
Grades 9 and 10 - Chemistry - High School - Chemistry - Earth's Crust
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11 Questions

1. Why is it so difficult to predict when, where and how strong an Earthquake will be?
2. Wegener used the similarities between fossil animals and plants as evidence for his theory. How did his critics explain it?
3. Which of the layers of the Earth is the hottest?
4. When seen in cross section, the core accounts for about how much of the Earth?
5. Wegener put forward his theory early in the twentieth century but scientists at the time refused to accept his idea until the 1960s. Why?
6. What is thought to cause the plates to move around?
7. When seen in cross section, the core accounts for about how much of the Earth?
8. 'If we are to believe in Wegener's hypothesis we must forget everything which has been learned in the past 70 years and start all over again.'
It turned out that he was absolutely right but by the time the theory was accepted it was more like forgetting everything that had been learned in the last 120 years than the last 70!"
9. 'If we are to believe in Wegener's hypothesis we must forget everything which has been learned in the past 70 years and start all over again.'
It turned out that he was absolutely right but by the time the theory was accepted it was more like forgetting everything that had been learned in the last 120 years than the last 70!"
10. Wegener put forward his theory early in the twentieth century but scientists at the time refused to accept his idea until the 1960s. Why?
11. What was the main piece of evidence that convinced scientists that continental drift was right?