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Weathering and Erosion

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Title: Weathering and Erosion


1
Weathering and Erosion
  • Earth Processes
  • Hill Science 6

2
Weathering
  • Weathering is the wearing or breaking of rocks
    into smaller pieces by water, temperature
    changes, wind, living things, or chemical
    changes.
  • The fragments of rock stay in place.

3
Weathering
  • There are two types of weathering
  • Mechanical weathering
  • and
  • Chemical weathering

4
Mechanical Weathering
  • The physical breakdown of rocks into smaller
    pieces, gradually reducing them to the tiny
    particles that make up soil.

5
Agents of Mechanical Weathering
  • Wind, water, gravity, glaciers - Abrasion
  • Ice ice wedging
  • Pressure change inside earth to surface of
    earth - exfoliation
  • Temperature change alternating hot to cold -
    exfoliation
  • Plants and animals organic activity root pry,
    animal burrowing

6
Wind
Arches National Park, Utah, USA
7
These rocks have been blasted by wind and sand
causing them to become rounded.
Type of Weathering? WIND ABRASION
8
Water
The Grand Canyon created by the Colorado River
9
Water
Friction and Repeated Impact
Type of weathering? Abrasion
10
Glacial Action
Glacial ice will scour and abrade the surface it
slowly scraps over. Glaciers form broad U-shaped
valleys in their wake. What type of
weathering? Abrasion
11
Exfoliation On Half Dome, the rock is peeling
away from the mountain in layers just like an
onion. This is called exfoliation which is caused
by the change in pressure when a rock that was
formed underground is thrust to the surface.
12
Pressure Changes
Peeling of the surface of a rock due to pressure
change. What type of weathering? Exfoliation
13
Temperature Changes
  • Warm to cold and back again
  • Splits rocks or peels off layers

14
Temperature Change
Repetition of cooling and heating over and over
again. When might that happen? What type of
weathering? Exfoliation
15
Temperature Changes
  • Water to Ice
  • Ice Wedging
  • Heaving
  • Glaciers

16
Ice Wedging
Water fills a crack, freezes and expands making a
larger crack. This process repeats over and over.
17
Ice wedging slowly breaks up this sedimentary
rock into unusual shapes.
18
Frost Heaving
Repetitious freezing and thawing of water under
the patio causes the surface to heave when the
ice expands under the patio and contracts when
ice melts.
19
Organic Activity
Plants What do you see happening here?
Root Pry
20
Plant RootsThe action of plant roots is called
root pry
21
Animal Activity- how does this cause weathering?
22
Pictures of Mechanical Weathering
  • Link to pictures
  • Link to places

23
Mechanical Weathering
  • 1. Abrasion the wearing away of solid
    particles caused by wind, water, glacier ice,
    and gravity
  • 2. Ice wedging - when water in a crack or hole
    in a rock freezes it expands making the opening
    larger. Melting moves it deeper into the opening
    and the process repeats Caused by the repeated
    thawing and freezing of water.

24
Mechanical Weathering
  • 3. Organic activity people, animals, or plants
    break up rock by digging or burrowing. Root pry
    the splitting of rock caused by the expanding
    root growing deeper.
  • 4. Exfoliation flaking off of the surface of
    the rock caused by change in pressure from
    inside earth where formed to lower surface
    pressure or temperature change.
  • 5. Heaving rocks shift and crack caused by
    repeated freezing and thawing

25
Chemical Weathering
  • Chemical weathering is the breaking down of rocks
    by changing their chemical composition.

26
Agents of Chemical Weathering
  • Acid precipitation - carbonation
  • Acid from plants humic acids
  • Oxygen - oxidation

27
Water
  • Carbonation - Water weathers rock by dissolving
    it

28
Carbon Dioxide
  • CO2 dissolves in rain water and creates carbonic
    acid
  • Carbonic acid easily weathers limestone and
    marble (CaCO3)
  • A cave may
  • result
  • Type of weathering?
  • carbonation

29
  • Chemical Weathering
  • Carbonation

Sinkhole
Stalactites and Stalagmites
Karst terrain
30
Result of Rainwater Weathering
Type of Weathering? carbonation
31
Humic AcidsAcid from Lichens Weathering Rock
32
Living Organisms
  • Lichens that grow on rocks produce weak acids
    that chemically weather rock

Type of weathering? Humic acids
33
Oxygen
  • Iron combines with oxygen in the presence of
    water in a process called oxidation
  • The product of oxidation is rust

34
Oxygen Caused Chemical Weathering
Type of weathering? oxidation
35
Chemical Weathering
  • Carbonation-Acid precipitation - CO2 dissolves in
    rain water and creates carbonic acid which easily
    changes the chemical composition of certain rocks
    (limestone and marble)
  • Humic Acids lichens and moss produce acids that
    break down the minerals found in rocks they are
    growing on
  • Oxidation when oxygen combines with another
    substance to create an entirely new substance Fe
    O produces iron oxide (rust)

36
Weathering and Erosion
  •  Weathering and erosion are called external
    processes because they occur at or near Earths
    surface.
  • Weathering and erosion are part of the rock
    cycle because they are responsible for
    transforming solid rock into sediment.
  • So how do they differ?

37
Weathering or Erosion?
  • Weathering is the breaking of rocks into smaller
    pieces.
  • Erosion is the moving of weathered sediments from
    one place to another.
  • Erosion is the transportation of weathered
    material by the mobile agents of wind, water and
    glacial action (ice).

38
Video Links
  • Formation of the Grand Canyon
  • Grand Canyon Lava Flows
  • Ireland Glaciated Landscape

39
Principal of Uniformity
  • Belief that the processes that changed our world
    in the past are still in existence today and
    continue to change the earth.

40
Chemical Weathering
  • Chemical weathering is the breaking down of rocks
    by changing their chemical composition.

41
Rates of Weathering
Chapter 10
Differential Weathering
  • What Is Differential Weathering? Differential
    weathering is a process by which softer, less
    weather resistant rock wear away and leave
    harder, more weather resistant rock. The image
    below is an example of differential weathering.

Devils Tower, Wyoming
42
Rates of Weathering
  • What determines how quickly a rock will weather?
  • Type of Rock (differential weathering) some
    rocks weather more quickly than others, due to
    composition or condition
  • Pollution causes acid precipitation which will
    weather rocks more quickly
  • Climate tropical fastest due to more moisture
    and plant action, deserts slowest due to lack of
    humidity
  • Size smaller rock has more surface area to
    volume than a larger rock. More surface is
    exposed to weathering, so it will weather more
    quickly.

43
Rates of Weathering
Chapter 10
44
Chapter 10
Rates of Weathering
Weathering and Elevation
  • High Elevations Rocks at higher elevations, as on
    a mountain, are exposed to more wind, rain, and
    ice than rocks at lower elevations.
  • Steep Slopes The steepness of mountain slopes
    increases the effects of mechanical and chemical
    weathering. Steep slopes cause water and
    sediments to quickly run down the side of the
    mountain.

45
Weathering Website
  • Weathering animation click here
  • http//www.uky.edu/AS/Geology/howell/goodies/elear
    ning/module07swf.swf
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