Title: Classroom presentations to accompany Understanding Earth, 3rd edition
1Classroom presentations to accompany
Understanding Earth, 3rd edition
- prepared by
- Peter Copeland and William Dupré
- University of Houston
Chapter 6 Weathering and Erosion
2Weathering and Erosion
Tim Davis/Photo Researchers
3Weathering
- Physical and chemical changes that occur in
sediments and rocks when they are exposed to the
atmosphere and biosphere. - Not the same as erosion.
4Factors Controlling Rates of Weathering
5Chemical weathering
- This process occurs because minerals formed deep
in the earths interior are not stable under
surface conditions. - Stability is generally the reverse of Bowens
reaction series. - The principle agent of chemical weathering is
water.
6Chemical weathering of silicates
- Quartz very stable
- Feldspars form clay minerals
- Mafic minerals decompose to oxides
7Chemical weathering of carbonates
- Easily soluble in water (especially with some
acid present) - Ca and Mg taken into solution
8Weathering rates of gravestones
Marble
Slate
Fig. 6.1
R. Siever
9Etched and corroded feldspar in the soil zone
Fig. 6.2
Berner Holden, 1977
10Fig. 6.3a
11Fig. 6.3b
12Fig. 6.3c
13Analogy of weathering making coffee
fresh grounds water coffee residue
(a
solution) K-feldspar water K kaolinite
(a clay
mineral)
14Weathering and Making coffee
Fig. 6.4
15Weathering by solution
- The complete breakup of minerals into
- ions in solution
- NaCl (halite) is the best example, but is
- geologically unimportant
- calcite (limestone) CaCO3
- CaCO3 H2CO3 Ca2 2HCO3-
- Mafic silicates dissolve much more
- slowly
16Mechanical Weathering Changes the Surface to
Volume Ratio
Fig. 6.5
17Fig. 6.6
18Fig. 6.6
19CO2 and the Atmosphere, Weathering, and the
Climate
Fig. 6.7
20Fig. 6.8
21Weathering Oxides Provide Color to the Desert
Landscape
Betty Crowell
Fig. 6.9
22Weathered Limestone
Fig. 6.10
Ric Ergenbright
23(No Transcript)
24Joint-controlled Weathering
Fig. 6.11
Jeff Foott/DRK
25Mechanical weathering
- Frost water expands by 9 when it freezes
- Thermal expansion differential thermal
expansion of minerals creates stress in rocks - Organic activity tree roots to
micro-organisms - Mechanical abrasion things go bump
26Role of Organisms in Weathering
Fig. 6.12
Peter Kresam
27Gneiss Boulder Fractured by Frost Action
Michael Hambrey
Fig. 6.13
28Exfoliation Dome in Yosemite
Fig. 6.14
Tony Waltham
29Spheroidal Weathering
Fig. 6.15
Michael Follo
30Weathering terms
- Bedrock unaltered rock of any kind
- Regolith a layer of broken pieces of rock
and slightly altered rock that overlies the
bedrock - Soil a layer of altered mineral material
usually mixed with organic material
31Weathering, Soil Formation, and Erosion
Fig. 6.16
32Weathering, Soil Formation, and Erosion
Fig. 6.16
33Change in U.S. soil erosion rates
34Soil Profile
Fig. 6.17
35Laterite
Fig. 6.18a
36Pedalfer
Fig. 6.18b
37Pedocal
Fig. 6.18c
38Sand
Fig. 6.19
Rex Elliot