Title: GY1004 Principles of Physical Geography B
1- GY1004 Principles of Physical Geography B
- Lecture 4
- Weathering products and process controls
DEPARTMENT OF GEOGRAPHY
2Weathering profiles
3The products of weathering
Physical weathering - rock fragments
Chemical weathering - material that is lost in
solution - the production of new compounds -
the residue of stable compounds
4The products of chemical weathering
1. Material that is lost in solution Na, K, Mg,
Ca ions taken up by plants flushed into
rivers, lakes and seas form precipitates/cements
.
5The products of chemical weathering
- New compounds
- (secondary minerals)
- Clay minerals
Compounds of iron and aluminium
6What are clays?
Complex hydrated alumino-silicates Formed through
the recombination of silica, aluminium and metal
cations during chemical weathering
processes Different clays result from the
composition of the circulating pore water the
mineralogy of the bedrock the intensity of
leaching Eh-pH conditions
7Clays and leaching
8The products of chemical weathering
3. The residue of stable compounds mainly
silica forms a large proportion of soils,
sandstones and other sedimentary rocks.
9Weathering profiles
10Weathering and Landforms
11Weathering and Landforms
12Karst
- Karst bare stony ground
- - limestone terrain characterised by a lack of
surface drainage, a discontinuous or thin soil
cover, abundant enclosed depressions and a well
developed system of underground caves.
13Karst
- Develops best where
- limestone is pure
- limestone is thick, strong, massive
- climate is humid
- relief is high
- Classic Area - former Yugoslavia.
14Karren
1 m
15Dolines
16Tower Karst Guilin, China
17Factors influencing weathering
1. Climate 2. Parent material 3. Topography 4. Veg
etation 5. Time
181. Climate
Intensity of chemical weathering in relation to
rainfall and temperature Peltier (1950)
19Variation in the depth of the weathered mantle in
relation to climate (Strakov, 1967)
20Intensity of physical weathering in relation to
rainfall and temperature (Peltier, 1950)
21Intensity of physical and chemical weathering in
relation to rainfall and temperature Peltier
(1950)
222. Parent material
Mineralogical composition Physical
characteristics
23Proportion of area covered by major rock
types Shale 52 Sandstone 15 Granites 15 Li
mestone 7 Others 11
Mineralogical composition affects both the rate
and products of chemical weathering
24Physical characteristics (particle size,
porosity, permeability etc.) mainly affects the
rate rather than the products of weathering.
253. Vegetation
- Release of organic acids
- Supply of CO2
264. Topography
-
- Influences movement of water through the regolith
275. Time
Duricrusts - hard layers formed in the weathering
zone at or near the land-surface as a consequence
of mineral accumulations.
28Summary
- The products of physical weathering (fragments
of chemically unaltered rock) and chemical
weathering (secondary minerals and the residue of
resistant minerals) accumulate in the regolith. - The accumulation of organic matter in the
regolith leads to the development of soil.
29Summary
- In general, landforms related directly to
weathering are minor and the relationship between
lithology and landscape is weak. - Certain lithologies, however, can influence
landscape development to such an extent that
distinctive landform assemblages can be
associated with specific types of rock (e.g.
landscapes of karst and granitic terrains).
30Summary
- Weathering rates and processes are controlled by
five factors climate, parent material,
vegetation/organic activity, topography and time. - The factors influence the spatial distribution
of soils, landforms and landscapes at a range of
different scales, from the local to the global.