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Page 1: Shaping Earth’s Surface

Shaping Earth’s Surface

Chapter 3, Lesson 5

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What is weathering?

• Weathering is the process through which rocks or other materials are broken down.

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Physical weathering

• Physical weathering: weathering caused by temperature changes, pushing, pulling, or rubbing.

• Plants and trees growing up between cracks in the street, or sidewalk. The pressure from their roots pushing against the rock will cause particles to break off.

• The breaking of material is a physical change.

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Physical weathering

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Physical weathering

• Gravity pulling rocks down a slope. The rocks bump into other rocks, causing chips, and cracks to form.

• Wind and water will pick up small particles of sand and dirt and rub it against exposed rock. Causing the surfaces of exposed rock to wear away.

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Physical weathering

Rock slide

Water erosion

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Chemical weathering

• Chemical weathering occurs when chemicals break down rocks.

• Chemical weathering in ground water break up underground rock, caves.

• Above ground, acid rain causes statues to tarnish, or metals to rust.

• Chemical weathering can also kill vegetation.

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Chemical weathering

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Erosion

• Erosion is the process through which weathered rock is moved from one place to another place.

• Land can be eroded in five different ways.–1. gravity–2. glaciers–3. running water–4. waves–5. wind

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What is deposition

• Deposition: Particles of dirt and rock that are dropped off in another place.

• Deposition by water forms deltas at the mouth of a river.

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Delta

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What is Deposition by Waves

• Eventually, rivers flow into larger bodies of water, such as lakes or oceans. As a river enters a lake or an ocean, its speed slows. The river then deposits the rest of its sediment. This sediment builds up over time to form a delta.

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What is Deposition by Waves

• http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://www.greatdreams.com/weather/hurricane-ike11-gilchrist-tx.jpg&imgrefurl=http://www.greatdreams.com/weather/hurricanes-2008c.htm&usg=__Hy_2EL74SW9R9QH0iqHpEukDIQE=&h=1040&w=990&sz=396&hl=en&start=15&um=1&itbs=1&tbnid=dWa02EhClDAczM:&tbnh=150&tbnw=143&prev=/images%3Fq%3DHurricane%2Bin%2BBarrier%2BIslands%2BTexas%26um%3D1%26hl%3Den%26safe%3Dactive%26sa%3DN%26rls%3Dcom.microsoft:*%26tbs%3Disch:1

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What is Deposition by Waves

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What is Deposition by Wind

• Wind can wear away at rocks, smoothing them out.

• Wind also can move sand or sediment from one place to another.

• When the winds slow down, the sand and soil are deposited.

• (Snow drifts in the plains during winter!)• (Sand dunes in the desert actually move!)

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What is Deposition by Wind

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What is Deposition by Wind

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How are rivers changed?

• A river is changed by the erosion and deposition of sediment.

• Water can erode sediment as it flows through a river channel.

• As the water in the river or stream slows, the sediments are deposited along the shoreline.

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How are rivers changed?

• When water enters a river or steam faster than it is carried away, it is called a flood.

• Floods occur when water from a river or stream overflows its banks.

• Natural wetlands can soak up water and reduce the changes of a flood.

• A floodplain is an area that easily floods.

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How are rivers changed?

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Flood control

• Floods are dangerous to people.• The force of moving water can wash away

trees, animals, cars, people, and even buildings.

• Floods leave mud, trash, and other debris in homes and on the streets.

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Flood control

• Atlanta Flood – $250 Million

September 23, 2009ByJennifer Brett

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Flood control

• A dam is a structure built across a river.• Water builds up behind the dam and is stored.• The water is released slowly over time to

prevent flooding.• Levees are walls built along the sides of a river.

• A levee raises the banks of a river so that

more water can flow through without flooding the surrounding area.

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Flood control

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Flood control

• In rural areas, plants help control floodwaters.• The roots of plants, along side a river or

stream, helps to hold soil in place, and can soak up floodwaters.

• Canals or channels can also be dug to carry away water that would cause floods.

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Flood control

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How are shorelines changed and protected?

• A shoreline or the edge of a body of water is changed by the erosion and deposition of sediment.

• Sediment is eroded and deposited along a shoreline by waves and wind.

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How are shorelines changed and protected?

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How are shorelines changed and protected?

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How are shorelines changed and protected?

• Waves: As waves wash sand off beaches, they deposit it in the water.

• Sandbar: a strip of sandy land that stretches for hundreds of kilometers along a coastline. (If above the water, Barrier Island.)

• Barrier Islands protect beaches from erosion.• http://

science.howstuffworks.com/barrier-island.htm

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How are shorelines changed and protected?

• Wind: Some coastal areas have one or more sets of dunes along the shoreline.

• Dunes protect areas farther inland from the large waves that can occur during storms.

• Dunes also shelter inland areas from the wind.

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How are shorelines changed and protected?

• Barricades, a breakwater is a long wall built out in the ocean parallel to the shore.

• Waves hit the breakwater and are slowed.• Slower waves cannot carry as much sand away

from the beach.

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How are shorelines changed and protected?

• Reclamation: Some beaches have been badly damaged and are in danger of being lost.

• Beach reclamation is a process where sand is brought from another place. The new wand “reclaims” the old shoreline.


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