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Ch 5 Weathering & Erosion Objectives Briefly contrast weathering and erosion. Contrast chemical and mechanical weathering. List and describe the types of ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ch%205%20


1
Ch 5 Weathering Erosion
  • Objectives
  • Briefly contrast weathering and erosion.
  • Contrast chemical and mechanical weathering.
  • List and describe the types of mechanical
    weathering.
  • List and describe the types of chemical
    weathering.
  • List the products resulting from the chemical
    weathering of Igneous rocks.
  • List and discuss the factors that influence the
    type and rate of rock weathering.

2
The Rock Cycle
This Unit Ch 5 6
Last Unit Ch 3 4
What kinds of rock can be melted? Can be
weathered eroded? Heated Pressurized?
3
Weathering
  • Breakdown of rock due to surface processes
  • 2 types of weathering
  • Physical (Mechanical)
  • Chemical

4
Physical Weathering
  • Abrasion - wind water
  • Frost wedging - water expands when it freezes
  • Exfoliation or unloading
  • rock breaks off into leaves or sheets along
    joints which parallel the ground surface
  • caused by expansion of rock due to uplift and
    erosion removal of pressure of deep burial
  • Thermal expansion -
  • repeated daily heating and cooling of rock
  • heat causes expansion cooling causes
    contraction.
  • different minerals expand and contract at
    different rates causing stresses along mineral
    boundaries.
  • Plant Roots break rocks apart as they grow
  • Salt Crystal Growth evaporation, crystals grow
    between rocks

5
Type of physical weathering?
6
Type of physical weathering?
7
Type of physical weathering?
8
Type of physical weathering?
9
Type of physical weathering?
10
Type of physical weathering?
11
Type of physical weathering?
12
Type of physical weathering?
13
Chemical Weathering
  • Rock reacts with water, gases and solutions (may
    be acidic) will add or remove elements from
    minerals.
  • 1. Dissolution (or solution)
  • - also includes leaching
  • 2. Oxidation
  • 3. Hydrolysis
  • 4. Biological Action
  • 5. Spheroidal

14
Acid Rain
15
Dissolution
  • Several common minerals dissolve in water
  • halite
  • calcite
  • Limestone and marble contain calcite and are
    soluble in acidic water
  • Marble tombstones and carvings are particularly
    susceptible to chemical weathering by dissolution.

16
More Dissolution
  • Caves and caverns typically form in limestone
  • speleothems - cave formations made of calcite
  • form a rock called travertine
  • stalactites - from ceiling
  • stalagmites - on ground

17
More Dissolution
  • Karst topography forms on limestone terrain and
    is characterized by
  • caves/caverns,
  • sinkholes,
  • disappearing streams,
  • springs

18
Acid Leaching
19
Oxidation
  • Oxygen combines with iron-bearing silicate
    minerals causing "rusting"
  • biotite
  • Iron oxides are red, orange, or brown in color

20
Hydrolysis affected by H20
  • Feldspar alters to clay
  • Feldspars stable at high temperatures and
    pressures
  • Clays are stable under conditions at the Earth's
    surface
  • Quartz turns to sand

21
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22
Biological Action
  • Lichens, fungi, and other micro-organisms
  • Chemically and physically change rock

23
Spheroidal Weathering
  • chemical weathering of jointed rocks.
  • weather to form spherical shapes

24
Factors Affecting Weathering
Surface Area Texture Temperature Humidity Pla
nt growth Topography Time
  • Mineral Content
  • Least stable
  • Olivine
  • Ca plagioclase feldspar
  • Pyroxene
  • Amphibole
  • Biotite
  • Na plagioclase feldspar
  • Potassium feldspar
  • Muscovite
  • Quartz
  • Most stable

25
Factors Affecting Weathering
  • Surface Area Most important
  • Smaller particles, more surface area
  • Examples
  • Crushed ice cools faster
  • Granulated sugar dissolves faster
  • More exposed rocks weather more

26
Factors Affecting Weathering
  • Type of material both are from 1780s one is
    slate, the other is marble. Which is which? Why
    is there a difference?

27
Erosion
  • Movement / transportation
  • Wind, water, glacier
  • Mast Wasting - Movement of large amounts of
    material downhill under gravity
  • Creep
  • Mudflows
  • Slump
  • Rockfalls
  • Landfalls
  • Avalanches

28
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29
What happens to Granite?
  • Granite contains Na Plagioclase feldspar, K
    feldspar, Quartz
  • Lesser amounts of biotite, amphibole, or
    muscovite

Weathering 1. The feldspars undergo hydrolysis
to form ________ and Na and K ions The Na and K
ions removed by leaching. 2. The biotite
amphibole will undergo hydrolysis to form clay,
and oxidation to form _________. 3. The quartz
(and muscovite, if present) will remain as
residual minerals because they are very resistant
to weathering. They get smaller to make ________.
Weathered rock fragments are one of the
constituents of soil our next topic.
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