Top Banner
Chapter 5 Weathering and Soil Formation
23
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: Ch. 5 Dynamic Earth Part 1

Chapter 5

Weathering and Soil Formation

Page 2: Ch. 5 Dynamic Earth Part 1

Weathering

• Weathering- breaking down of rocks and other materials on the Earth’s surface.

– Effects all substances exposed to the atmosphere.

• Weathered bricks on buildings are darker in color and has rounded edges.

• The piles of rock at the base of a mountain is caused by weathering.

– Effects are not always easily observed.

Page 3: Ch. 5 Dynamic Earth Part 1

• Two types of weathering

• Mechanical weathering- weathering that does not involve changes in the chemical makeup of rocks.

• Chemical weathering- weathering that involves changes in the chemical makeup of rocks.

Page 4: Ch. 5 Dynamic Earth Part 1

Mechanical Weathering

• Rocks are broken into different shapes and smaller pieces.– At the beginning of the process, typical rock fragments

are sharp and angular. As weathering continues, they become smooth and rounded.

• Temperature- rocks can be broken apart by changes in temperature.– Heating and cooling cycle.

• Exfoliation- the breaking off of curved sheets or slabs parallel to a rock’s surface due to weathering.

Page 5: Ch. 5 Dynamic Earth Part 1
Page 6: Ch. 5 Dynamic Earth Part 1

• Frost action- the breaking apart of a rock caused by the water freezing and expanding within cracks.– Occurs when water seeps into a small opening or

crack in a rock. When the temperature falls below 0o C, the freezing point of water, the water in the crack freezes and expands. The crack in the rock is made larger by the pressure of the expanding water. In time, the freezing and melting of the water cause the rock to break into pieces.

Page 7: Ch. 5 Dynamic Earth Part 1
Page 8: Ch. 5 Dynamic Earth Part 1

• Organic activity- plants and animals can cause mechanical weathering.

• The roots of plants sometimes loosen rock material.

• A plant growing in a crack in a rock can make the crack larger as the plant’s roots grow and spread out.

• Root-pry- is an organic activity, or an activity caused by living things.

Page 9: Ch. 5 Dynamic Earth Part 1
Page 10: Ch. 5 Dynamic Earth Part 1

• Gravity- sometimes pulls loosened rocks down mountain cliffs.

• Landslides- a large movement of loose rocks and soil.

– As the rocks fall, they collide with one another and break into smaller pieces. Falling rocks generally occur in areas where a road or highway has been cut through a rock formation, leaving cliffs on one or both sides of the road.

Page 11: Ch. 5 Dynamic Earth Part 1
Page 12: Ch. 5 Dynamic Earth Part 1

• Abrasion- is the wearing away of rocks by solid particles carried by wind, water, or other forces.

– Wind- in desert areas, the wind easily picks up and moves sand particles.

– Water- rivers carry along loose rocks and other particles. The moving rocks and particles collide, scrap against one another, and eventually break.

Page 13: Ch. 5 Dynamic Earth Part 1
Page 14: Ch. 5 Dynamic Earth Part 1

Chemical Weathering

• Weathering that changes the mineral composition of the rock.

• As chemical changes take place, minerals can be added to or removed from rocks.

• The minerals in rocks can be broken down in a process called decomposition.

Page 15: Ch. 5 Dynamic Earth Part 1

• Water- can cause chemical weathering when combine with other things.

• Can dissolve most of the minerals that hold rocks together.

• Water can form acids when it mixes with certain gases in the atmosphere.– Acids often speed up the decomposition of rocks.

• Water can also combine with a mineral to form a completely different mineral.– When the mineral feldspar reacts with water, it forms

clay.

Page 16: Ch. 5 Dynamic Earth Part 1
Page 17: Ch. 5 Dynamic Earth Part 1

• Oxidation- is the process in which oxygen chemically combines with another substance.

• The result of oxidation is the formation of an entirely different substance.

• Iron in rocks combine with oxygen in the air to form iron oxide, or rust.

• If oxidation is taking place, the inner material of a rock will be a different color from the outer material.

Page 18: Ch. 5 Dynamic Earth Part 1
Page 19: Ch. 5 Dynamic Earth Part 1

• Carbonation- the process in which carbonic acid reacts chemically with other substances.

• Carbon dioxide dissolves in water, a weak acid called carbonic acid is formed.

• In nature carbonic acid is formed when carbon dioxide in the air dissolves in rain.

• Carbonic acid slowly decomposes feldspar and limestone.

Page 20: Ch. 5 Dynamic Earth Part 1

• Sulfuric Acid- the air in certain areas is polluted with sulfur oxides. Sulfur oxides are the byproduct of the burning of coal as a source of energy.

• Sulfuric acid corrodes, or wears away, rocks, metals, and other materials very quickly.

Page 21: Ch. 5 Dynamic Earth Part 1

• Plant Acids- certain types of plants can cause chemical weathering.

• Mosses produce weak acids that can weather certain types of minerals in rocks.

• Mosses can gradually dissolve minerals and break rock into smaller pieces.

• Lichens also produce weak acids that break down the minerals in rock.

Page 22: Ch. 5 Dynamic Earth Part 1

Rate of Weathering

• Stable rock- a rock composed of minerals that resist chemical weathering.

• Factors of Weathering– Composition of rocks

• Two different types of rocks in the same climate can weather differently.

– Time the rock is exposed• A very old rock that has not been exposed to the various forces of

weathering can remain almost unchanged. But if a newly formed rock is immediately deposited on the Earth’s surface, it will begin to weather right away.

– Exposed surface area• The more surface area that is exposed the more weathering takes

place.

Page 23: Ch. 5 Dynamic Earth Part 1