Top Banner
BELL WORK 11/5 What carved this rock? (see picture)
19
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: BELL WORK 11/5 What carved this rock? (see picture)

BELL WORK 11/5

What carved this rock? (see picture)

Page 2: BELL WORK 11/5 What carved this rock? (see picture)

WEATHERING

Page 4: BELL WORK 11/5 What carved this rock? (see picture)

AGREE OR DISAGREE?

1. Weathering is the same as erosion.

2. Humans are the main cause of weathering.

3. Plants can break rocks into smaller pieces.

4. Air and water are present in soil.

5. Soil that is 1,000 years old is young soil.

6. Soil is the same in all locations.

Page 5: BELL WORK 11/5 What carved this rock? (see picture)

WEATHERING

•The mechanical and chemical processes that change objects on Earth’s surface over time• Over thousands of years, weathering can break

rock into smaller and smaller pieces, such as sand, silt, and clay.

Page 6: BELL WORK 11/5 What carved this rock? (see picture)

HOW CAN ROCKS BE BROKEN DOWN? MINI LAB

•How are rocks in a stream different from other rocks?

•Complete lab

•What do you think caused your rocks to change?

Page 7: BELL WORK 11/5 What carved this rock? (see picture)

MECHANICAL WEATHERING

•When physical processes naturally break rocks into smaller pieces

•The chemical makeup of a rock stays the same

Page 8: BELL WORK 11/5 What carved this rock? (see picture)

CAUSES OF MECHANICAL WEATHERING

•Thermal expansion

• Ice wedging

•Abrasion

•Plant growth

•Animal activity

Page 9: BELL WORK 11/5 What carved this rock? (see picture)

CAUSES OF MECHANICAL WEATHERING SKIT

•Groups of 4

•5 minutes to come up with a skit that explains your cause

• Skit must be 1 minute or less

Page 10: BELL WORK 11/5 What carved this rock? (see picture)

SURFACE AREA

•The amount of space on the outside of an object

• When something is broken into smaller pieces, it has a GREATER surface area.

• Calculate the surface area to volume ratio for both cubes in figure 1.

Page 11: BELL WORK 11/5 What carved this rock? (see picture)

BELL WORK 11/6

Why is the surface area of a rock important?

Page 12: BELL WORK 11/5 What carved this rock? (see picture)

CHEMICAL WEATHERING

•Changes the materials that are part of a rock into new materials

Page 13: BELL WORK 11/5 What carved this rock? (see picture)

CHEMICAL WEATHERING

WATER

• Most substances dissolve in water.

• The small pieces mix with water to form a solution and are washed away from the rock.

ACIDS

• Acids increase the rate of chemical weathering

OXIDATION

• combines the element oxygen with other elements or molecules

• The product of oxidation is called an oxide

Page 14: BELL WORK 11/5 What carved this rock? (see picture)

DEBATE- AIR VS. WATER

•Pairs of 2

•Pick a role to play a debate between water and air regarding which is a more powerful agent of chemical weather

•Why??

Page 15: BELL WORK 11/5 What carved this rock? (see picture)

WHAT AFFECTS WEATHERING RATES?

•The environment helps determine the rate of weathering.

• Mechanical weathering occurs fastest in locations that have a lot of temperature changes.

• Chemical weathering is fastest in warm, wet places.

•The type of rock being weathered also affects the rate of weathering and determines what kinds of products result.

Page 16: BELL WORK 11/5 What carved this rock? (see picture)

WEATHERING RATES LAB

Page 17: BELL WORK 11/5 What carved this rock? (see picture)

SUMMARY• Weathering is the

mechanical and chemical processes that change things over time.

• Mechanical weathering does not change the identity of the materials that make up rocks. It breaks up rocks into smaller pieces.

Page 18: BELL WORK 11/5 What carved this rock? (see picture)

SUMMARY• Chemical weathering is the

process that changes the minerals that are part of every rock into new materials. Oxidation and reaction with an acid are both examples of chemical weathering. D

r. M

arl

i M

iller/

Gett

y Im

ag

es

Page 19: BELL WORK 11/5 What carved this rock? (see picture)

WHAT DO YOU THINK NOW?AGREE OR DISAGREE?1. Weathering is the same as erosion.

2. Humans are the main cause of weathering.

3. Plants can break rocks into smaller pieces.

4. Air and water are present in soil.

5. Soil that is 1,000 years old is young soil.

6. Soil is the same in all locations.