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Homework answers / question archive / Wilfrid Laurier University Department of Geography and Environmental Studies Geography 101 Section A Take Home Final Examination Fall 2020 There are three sections to the examination
Wilfrid Laurier University
Department of Geography and Environmental Studies
Geography 101 Section A Take Home Final Examination Fall 2020
There are three sections to the examination. Section One has multiple choice questions, Section Two is short answer questions, and Section Three has a series of lab and applied questions. The responses to Section One will be submitted through a Quiz in MyLS. The responses to Sections Two and Three will be submitted in a document. That document will be submitted into a dropbox in MyLS called 'Take Home Final Exam'.
When preparing your responses to Sections Two and Three follow the guidelines set out below:
Surname_First_Name_Final_Examination_GG101A.pdf for example:
Hamilton_James_Final_Examination_GG101A.pdf
Section One Multiple Choice Questions (25 marks )
All questions in Section One are multiple choice. There is one correct response per question. Determine your answer to each question that is posed below. When you have your final answers, go to MyLS Quizzes, locate the Final Exam MC Quiz, start the quiz and enter your answer for each multiple choice question. Submit the Quiz.
Q1. In a stream channel, the fine grained sediments such as clay are normally transported:
Q2. In a stream channel, abrasion refers to:
Q3. A stream experiences a change in its discharge, the initial value is low and then the discharge increases significantly. Which one of the following would likely occur as the discharge increases to a very high value?
Q4. In lecture we reviewed some of the changes that occurred in the Don River in the City of Toronto over the last 200 years. In the lower portion of the Don River the channel has been significantly altered. Which one of the following is a major change that occurred in the lower portion of the Don River in the latter part of the 19th century?
Q5. Which one of the following statements is false?
Q6. In a meandering stream, the deeper water sections of the channel that are located opposite the point bars are called:
Q7. If a stream has just the gradient and discharge to transport its sediment load, it is said to be:
Q8. Which one of the following is a physical weathering process?
Q9. In general terms, the rates of chemical weathering processes are highest:
Q10. Freeze-thaw cycles can cause physical weathering due to:
Q11. A mass movement is more likely if earth surface materials are weakened and experience a reduction in strength. Consider a steep slope that is comprised of fine textured materials such as silt and clay mixed with some sandy sediments. What one of the following processes would result in a loss of strength in that material.
Q12. Which one of the following is an example of a rapidly moving mixture of sediment and water?
Q13. A forward rotation of slabs of bedrock failing along vertical fractures is called: a) a slide
Q14. The slow downslope movement of surficial materials caused in part by alternating cycles of expansion and contraction is called:
Q15. In which one of the following latitudinal belts or regions is the average annual receipt of incoming shortwave radiation the highest?
Q16. In mountainous areas mass movements along roadways are common. When road beds are constructed in rugged terrain a cut anf fill technique is often used, whereby the hillslope is cut into (the 'cut') and the debris is used to construct a portion of the roadbed (the 'fill'). Why does this technique make mass movements along that corridor more likely?
Q17. Longwave radiation arriving at the surface of the Earth (L9):
Q18. Which one of the following statements is true?
Q19. Which one of the following regarding low pressure areas (cyclones) is true?
Q20. Which one of the following describes the Coriolis force?
Q21. Which one of the following materials would have the highest wilting point?
Q22. Consider a parcel of air that has fixed water vapour content. The temperature of the parcel of air is increased without the addition or loss of any water vapour. What occurs to the relative humidity of the air as it is warmed?
Q23. Which one of the following air masses tends to bring very warm humid air to southern Ontario in the summer months?
Q24. The equatorial belt receives very high amounts of precipitation largely because:
Q25. A well drilled into which one of the following would yield economic quantities of fresh groundwater?
GG101 Final Take Home Examination
Section Two: Short Answer Questions (15 marks )
Respond to Three (3) of the following five questions, present your responses in your answer document.
Define net radiation, describe the global distribution of net radiation, and describe the variables that control the distribution of net radiation.
Figure 2.10 (Geosystems). Daily net radiation patterns at the top of the atmosphere. Units are in W/m2.
Describe why the interior of British Columbia is so dry relative to the coastal region of British Columbia. In your answer you should consider all of the variables that control or influence regional climate with a focus on precipitation.
GG101 Final Take Home Examination
Section Three: Lab and Applied Questions (30 marks )
Answer all of the following questions, present your responses in your answer document.
Topographic Map, Imagery, Fluvial Geomorphology Questions
On the following page, there is a portion of the Glenboro, Manitoba NTS map sheet. In this document, the map is presented as a geopdf file. Use the Adobe Acrobat Reader DC program to view this document, just as was done during Lab 1. In the Adobe program the Measurement Tool may be used to measure the distance between two points (as was done in Lab 1). If the file is in a geopdf format when the measurement tool is used, the distance that is given is the ground distance. If the file is not a geopdf, the distance that is given is a map distance. On the map there are a series of markers shown as red circles with an uppercase letter labelling each of them. You will be measuring a ground distance between two of these markers. To ensure that you can measure a line on an angle between two points, go to Edit, Preferences, under Measuring (2D), make sure that “Use Orthogonal Lines” is turned off (no checkmark in the box).
For reference, a copy of the full 1:50,000 scale Glenboro, Manitoba map sheet as a pdf file is in the Final Exam folder. That full map sheet can be opened in Adobe Acrobat Reader DC, be aware that it is not a geopdf file. Information on the contour interval and the symbols that are used on the map are available on the full map sheet in the Lab 8 folder.
3.1 Using the map on the following page, determine the elevations in metres at Location A and
Location B, and the elevation difference between them. (1.5 marks )
Write your responses as:
Elevation at Location A is:
Elevation at Location B is:
Elevation Difference between A and B is:
3.2 Using the map on the following page, measure the ground distance between Location A and
Location B in metres. (1 mark )
Write your response as:
Ground Distance from A to B is:
The map below shows a portion of the Glenboro, Manitoba NTS map sheet.
A |
B |
F |
E |
C |
D |
3.3 Calculate the elevation gradient between Location A and Location B in m/km. Show your work, with all your calculation steps and your final answer clearly stated. (1.5 marks )
3.4 The map distance between Location C and Location D is 5.0 cm. Using the map in this document, measure the ground distance between those two locations and calculate the scale of this map. Show all your work, and clearly state your final answer. (2 marks )
3.5 Locate the red markers on the map that are labelled as E and F. The red markers are superimposed on features on the map. Determine what feature is shown at each marker. You may use any resources to make this determination, including the legend on the full Glenboro, Manitoba map sheet (in Lab 8 folder) and Google Earth Pro. For each location identify the
feature and provide a description of the feature. (2 marks)
Begin your responses as:
Location E is:
Location F is:
3.6 In the Final Examination folder in MyLS there is a kmz file called Glenboro.kmz. Download that file. Start Google Earth Pro and open the file Glenboro.kmz. In that file there are three markers called Feature 1, Feature 2, and Feature 3. Navigate to each one of these locations. The markers show a combination of physical (Features 1, 2) and cultural features (Feature 3). Examine the imagery from a variety of perspectives. All of the features are located within boundaries of the Glenboro map sheet. You may use the Glenboro map sheet and the other layers from the lab on the Assiniboine River to help you identify and describe the features.
For each location, identify the feature (physical landform or cultural feature) briefly describe
it and how you made that determination. (6 marks )
Begin each response as:
Feature 1 is:
Feature 2 is: Feature 3 is:
3.7 In the Glenboro.kmz file there are two markers called North Bank 2011 and North Bank 2017. Navigate to those markers. Using the historic imagery tool there are four images that can be viewed, they are dated: (i) April 27, 2011, (ii) July 11, 2011, (iii) August 24, 2013, and (iv) June 26, 2017. Use the time slider in Google Earth Pro to examine what occurred in this portion of the Assiniboine River over the period 2011 to 2017.
changes, illustrate your answer if needed. (3 marks )
The marker North Bank 2017 shows the position of the stream bank in the same area on June 26, 2017. Measure the total amount of bank migration (erosion) that occurred over that interval in metres, and also express that in m/year. Comment on the magnitude and
significance of that value. (3 marks )
Humidity, Temperature, Air Mass Questions
Solve for the values that are blank in the table. Enter the correct answers into the table and show one full set of calculations (e.g. calculations from one row).
You will need to use the relative humidity equation and the relation between saturation vapour pressure and temperature (see the equations and the graph in Figure 1, below). Recall that at the dew point temperature RH = 100%. Start by using air temperature and the graph (Figure 1) to determine the saturation vapour pressure. Then, using the relative humidity and the saturation vapour pressure, calculate actual vapour pressure. Then, using the actual vapour pressure and the graph (Figure 1), determine the dew point temperature. (5 marks )
Time |
Air Temperature (oC) |
Saturation Vapour Pressure (es in mb) |
Dew Point Temperature (Td in oC) |
Actual Vapour Pressure (ea in mb) |
Relative Humidity (%) |
Wind Direction |
6 am |
3.0 |
|
|
|
100 |
E |
10 am |
10.0 |
|
|
|
65 |
ESE |
2 pm |
18.0 |
|
|
|
74 |
S |
6 pm |
21.0 |
|
|
|
62 |
SW |
10 pm |
12.5 |
|
|
|
100 |
SW |
daily pattern? (2 marks )
Consider the following questions:
Is there a marked change in the weather conditions as reflected in the temperature, humidity, and wind direction data during the day?
When did a major change occur?
What type of air masses are likely involved in this change?
Describes the changes that occurred in the weather variables, when the major change happened, and the likely air masses that were involved. Be specific with regard to the air masses. You should consider the typical air masses that influence southern Ontario and
contrast their temperature and humidity characteristics. (3 marks )