iWriteGigs

Fresh Grad Lands Job as Real Estate Agent With Help from Professional Writers

People go to websites to get the information they desperately need.  They could be looking for an answer to a nagging question.  They might be looking for help in completing an important task.  For recent graduates, they might be looking for ways on how to prepare a comprehensive resume that can capture the attention of the hiring manager

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Manush’s story shows the importance of using powerful keywords to his resume in landing the job he wanted.

Midterm 3

Navigation   » List of Schools  »  Glendale Community College  »  Geology  »  Geology 101 – Introduction to Geology  »  Spring 2022  »  Midterm 3

Need help with your exam preparation?

Below are the questions for the exam with the choices of answers:

Question #1
A  Humid areas are only underlain by lithified bedrock and never have any loose sediment that wind can transport.
B  Humid areas experience significantly less wind than dry regions.
C  Vegetation in humid areas anchors the soil, which inhibits wind erosion.
D  The sediment in humid regions is consistently gravel-sized or larger, which is difficult or impossible for wind to move.
Question #2
A  Mechanical
B  Dissolution
C  Chemical
D  Erosional
Question #3
A  Deserts are located where there are ascending air masses and low atmospheric pressure.
B  Although rainfalls are infrequent, erosion and deposition related to water are more important than wind in deserts.
C  Deserts are always located in hot, humid coastal areas.
D  Deserts are defined by their sand content.
Question #4
A  Changes in the atmopsheric carbon dioxide levels
B  Plate tectonics and the movement of continents on the Earth
C  All answer choices
D  Variations in the Earth’s orbit around the sun
Question #5
A  since the origin of the Earth 4.5 billion years ago
B  since the last glacial maximum
C  600 million years
D  30 million years
Question #6
A  V
B  Y
C  U
D  W
Question #7
A  stagnant
B  advancing
C  retreating
Question #8
A  both upslope and downslope
B  Ice does not flow in a glacier.
C  upslope
D  downslope
Question #9
A  The Arctic Ocean
B  Greenland
C  Iceland
D  Canada
Question #10
A  They are required for crystallization of magma to occur
B  They can form from frozen seawater
C  They contribute to erosion
D  Upon melting, they create oceans
Question #11
A  At the last glacial maximum, sea level was about 10 meters (~30 feet) lower than it is today.
B  At the last glacial maximum, sea level was about 25 meters (~75 feet) lower than it is today.
C  At the last glacial maximum, sea level was about 100 meters (~300 feet) lower than it is today.
D  At the last glacial maximum, sea level was about 50 meters (~150 feet) lower than it is today.
E  At the last glacial maximum, sea level was about 1000 meters (~3000 feet) lower than it is today.
Question #12
A  dissolves; acidity
B  precipitates; alkalinity
C  precipitates; acidity
D  dissolves; alkalinity
Question #13
A  magma and igneous rocks
B  the climate
C  friction
D  the sun
Question #14
A  penetrate well below the regional water table surface
B  be drilled through an aquitard
C  be drilled into a perched aquifer
D  be drilled into the unsaturated zone
Question #15
A  Porosity is highly concerned with the connectedness of pore spaces, whereas permeability is not.
B  Permeability is expressed as a percentage, whereas porosity is not.
C  Permeability is highly concerned with the volume of open space within a rock, whereas porosity is not.
D  Porosity is the percentage of the total volume of rock or sediment that consists of pore spaces, whereas permeability is the ability of a rock or sediment to transmit fluid.
E  Permeability is the percentage of the total volume of rock or sediment that consists of pore spaces, whereas porosity is the ability of a rock or sediment to transmit fluid.
Question #17
A  plate tectonics
B  salinity
C  gravity
D  erosion
Question #18
A  below the unsaturated zone
B  below the saturated zone
C  above the zone of soil moisture
D  above the Earth’s surface
Question #19
A  has chemically reacted with the surrounding rock
B  has completely filled the pore spaces
C  does not exist
D  evaporates
Question #21
A  lake level
B  dam level
C  a canyon
D  sea level
Question #22
A  The river slows down and more sediments deposit from it
B  The river slows down and less sediments deposit from it
C  The river speeds up and more sediments deposit from it
D  The river speeds up and less sediments deposit from it
Question #23
A  Appalachian Mountains
B  Mississippi River
C  Sediment production zone
D  Continental Divide
Question #24
A  Watershed
B  Stream
C  Tributary
D  Divide
Question #26
A  runoff
B  evaporation
C  infiltration
D  precipitation
Question #28
A  it completely melts and undersaturates the soil beneath it.
B  it completely melts and creates a lake where the ice used to be
C  it can crack in several places, creating crevices and collapsing into sinkholes
D  ice within the permafrost may melt, causing the ground to slide, slump, or subside.
Question #29
A  rivers
B  glaciers
C  lakes
D  groundwater
Question #30
A  saturated soil that moves downhill very slowly
B  the layer of soil that thaws to a depth of one meter during summer and refreezes during the winter
C  permanently frozen ground of tundra and subarctic climates that has remained 0°C for two years or more
D  soil that episodically moves downslope over time from repeated episodes of freezing and thawing
Question #31
A  plate tectonics; plate tectonics
B  volcanic activity; mass movement
C  mass movement; erosion
D  mass movement; plate tectonics
Question #32
A  planting vegetation
B  removal of water from sediments
C  drought
D  adding water to sediments
Question #33
A  old, broad mountain
B  densely vegetated land
C  the great plains
D  steep slopes
Question #34
A  plate tectonics
B  glaciers
C  gravity
D  water
Question #35
A  uplift; subduction
B  uplift; subsidence
C  subduction; uplift
D  subsidence; uplift
Question #36
A  Andean-type mountains
B  Fault-block mountains
C  Alpine-type mountains
D  Island arc-type mountains
Question #37
A  Mid-Atlantic Ridge
B  Andes
C  Appalachians
D  Himalayas
Question #38
A  Subduction Zone
B  Convergent continental-continental plate bouundary
C  Hot Spot
D  Mid-oceanic ridge
Question #39
A  The rocks at the top of these mountains that contain fossils are oceanic terrains, which are blocks of rock that used to be various parts of oceanic crust. Thicker oceanic blocks of rock were tectonically moved toward the oceanic trench, colliding with the crustal rocks because they were too large to subduct.
B  During orogenesis, less dense oceanic crust containing marine fossils crumples up with denser continental crust during convergence. The lower density of the oceanic crust places marine fossils near the tops of the resulting mountains
C  The rocks at the top of these mountains that contain fossils are oceanic terranes, which are blocks of rock that used to be various parts of oceanic crust. Oceanic blocks of rock were tectonically moved toward the oceanic trench, colliding with the crustal rocks because they were too large to subduct due to the fact that they contained fossils.
D  The rocks at the top of these mountains that contain fossils are oceanic terranes, which are blocks of rock that used to be various parts of oceanic crust. Thicker oceanic blocks of rock were tectonically moved toward the oceanic trench, colliding with the crustal rocks because they were too large to subduct.
E  When two plates collide at their continental margins, their deformable seaward rock containing marine organisms crumples up to the top of the resulting mountains.
Question #40
A  Emplacement of batholiths
B  Extension of the continent through rifting
C  Crumpling of the continent through collision with another continent
D  Downwarping of the continent due to crustal subsidence
Question #41
A  an accretionary wedge
B  a batholith
C  a trench
D  a continental volcanic arc
E  a forearc basin
Question #42
A  continental plate; sediment
B  oceanic plate; magma
C  continental plate; magma
D  oceanic plate; sediment
Question #43
A  transform boundary
B  divergent boundary
C  convergent boundary
D  divergent boundary and transform boundary
E  convergent boundary and transform boundary