Rocks/Glaciers/Quiz

< Rocks < Glaciers
The Aletsch glacier is the largest in the Alps of Switzerland. Credit: Dirk Beyer.

Glaciers is a lecture and an article as part of the geology series.

You are free to take this quiz based on glaciers at any time.

To improve your score, read and study the lecture, the links contained within, listed under See also, and in the geology resources template. This should give you adequate background to get 100 %.

As a "learning by doing" resource, this quiz helps you to assess your knowledge and understanding of the information, and it is a quiz you may take over and over as a learning resource to improve your knowledge, understanding, test-taking skills, and your score.

A suggestion is to have the lecture available in a separate window.

To master the information and use only your memory while taking the quiz, try rewriting the information from more familiar points of view, or be creative with association.

Enjoy learning by doing!

Quiz

Point added for a correct answer:   
Points for a wrong answer:
Ignore the questions' coefficients:

1. True or False, A slow-moving river of ice is called a glacier.

TRUE
FALSE

2. The cryosphere is likely to include which of the following?

water in solid form
sea ice
rain
lake ice
river ice
snow cover
glaciers
ice caps
ice sheets

3. The science of the behavior of frozen snow is called


4. Chemistry phenomena associated with glaciers are

water
carbon dioxide
tantalum
organic compounds
silicates
polyethylene

5. Complete the text:

It has been recognized from previous studies that , as opposed to automated, delineation of glacier tended to digitize only a subset of all glaciers in a region, in general the ones.

6. Complete the text:

Match up the astroglacial object with each of the possibilities below:
ice cap - A
Christensen Glacier - B
water in solid form - C
behavior of frozen snow - D
ice sheets - E
Fedchenko Glacier - F
Antarctica and Greenland
cryopediology .
Bouvetøya .
Tajikistan .
cryosphere .
Vatnajökull, Iceland .

7. Complete the text:

Match up the object with the image:
Wedgemont alpine glacier - A
Vatnajökull, Iceland - B
the Cryosphere - C
Antarctica - D
Sawyer Glacier - E
Malaspina Glacier - F
Trips 04 - Mt Wedge - 02 (90961463).jpg
.
Antarctica 6400px from Blue Marble.jpg
.
Malaspina Glacier in Southeastern Alaska.jpg
.
Cryosphere Fuller Projection.png
.
Whaler off of NOAA Ship John N. Cobb-Sawyer Glacier.jpg
Vatnajökull.jpeg
.

8. Which of the following is not a glacier?

Vatnajökull, Iceland
Van Allen radiation belts
the last ice sheets in Europe and North America
the cryosphere
frozen snow
ice sheets are in Antarctica and Greenland

9. True or False, During the last glacial period at Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) the Laurentide ice sheet covered much of North America.

TRUE
FALSE

10. Which of the following is not a glacial characteristic of ice?

an albedo as high as 80%
thin water frost deposits
ice knobs
tidal heating events
surface is composed of water ice
napajäätikkö

11. Yes or No, A glacier that has one or more tributary glaciers that flow into it is a branched-valley glacier?

No
Yes

Your score is 0 / 0

Research

Hypothesis:

  1. There are no glaciers on Io.

Control groups

This is an image of a Lewis rat. Credit: Charles River Laboratories.

The findings demonstrate a statistically systematic change from the status quo or the control group.

“In the design of experiments, treatments [or special properties or characteristics] are applied to [or observed in] experimental units in the treatment group(s).[1] In comparative experiments, members of the complementary group, the control group, receive either no treatment or a standard treatment.[2]"[3]

Proof of concept

Def. a “short and/or incomplete realization of a certain method or idea to demonstrate its feasibility"[4] is called a proof of concept.

Def. evidence that demonstrates that a concept is possible is called proof of concept.

The proof-of-concept structure consists of

  1. background,
  2. procedures,
  3. findings, and
  4. interpretation.[5]

See also

References

  1. Klaus Hinkelmann, Oscar Kempthorne (2008). Design and Analysis of Experiments, Volume I: Introduction to Experimental Design (2nd ed.). Wiley. ISBN 978-0-471-72756-9. http://books.google.com/?id=T3wWj2kVYZgC&printsec=frontcover.
  2. R. A. Bailey (2008). Design of comparative experiments. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-68357-9. http://www.cambridge.org/uk/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=9780521683579.
  3. "Treatment and control groups, In: Wikipedia". San Francisco, California: Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. May 18, 2012. Retrieved 2012-05-31.
  4. "proof of concept, In: Wiktionary". San Francisco, California: Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. November 10, 2012. Retrieved 2013-01-13.
  5. Ginger Lehrman and Ian B Hogue, Sarah Palmer, Cheryl Jennings, Celsa A Spina, Ann Wiegand, Alan L Landay, Robert W Coombs, Douglas D Richman, John W Mellors, John M Coffin, Ronald J Bosch, David M Margolis (August 13, 2005). "Depletion of latent HIV-1 infection in vivo: a proof-of-concept study". Lancet 366 (9485): 549-55. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(05)67098-5. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1894952/. Retrieved 2012-05-09.

External links

This is a research project at http://en.wikiversity.org

Development status: this resource is experimental in nature.
Educational level: this is a research resource.
Resource type: this resource is a quiz.
Subject classification: this is an astronomy resource.
Subject classification: this is a Geology resource.
This article is issued from Wikiversity - version of the Sunday, March 06, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.