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Weathering%20

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Title: Weathering%20


1
Weathering Physical and Chemical
2
Weathering
  • Weathering is the wearing away of rock and can be
    chemical or physical.
  • Physical weathering the process by which rock
    is broken down into smaller pieces by physical
    means.
  • Chemical weathering - the break down of rocks by
    chemical means

3
Physical Weathering
  • Process by which rocks are broken down into
    smaller pieces by physical forces.
  • Types of Mechanical weathering
  • Abrasion
  • Temperature changes (freezing and thawing)
  • Ice or Frost wedging
  • Plant roots
  • Burrowing of animals (animal action)

4
Abrasion
  • Abrasion is weathering by grinding action This
    is physical weathering
  • These mountains in Costa Rica were mechanically
    weathered by abrasion.

5
These mountains in Salt Lake City, Utah, were
also weathered by abrasion.
6
Freezing and Thawing (temperature changes)
A rise in temperature causes rock to expand. A
decrease causes rocks to contract. This repeated
change weakens rocks, causing them to crumble.
7
Ice or Frost Wedging
Water enters the cracks in rocks and freezes,
causing the cracks to expand. This process will
eventually break even the biggest rocks.
8
Plant Roots
  • This happens as these small roots grow into small
    cracks, as the tree grows and the roots get
    bigger, they will eventually break the rock.
  • Think about how plants and weeds will grow in the
    smallest crack of a sidewalk. Also think about
    seeing tree roots that crack the sidewalk in
    older neighborhoods with large trees.

9
Animal Action (Burrowing)
Many dig burrows in the ground. Examples are
squirrels, prairie dogs, ants and earthworms.
As animals move soil, it exposes rocks, these
rocks then experience weathering.
10
Chemical Weathering
  • the process that breaks down rock through
    chemical changes.
  • The agents of chemical weathering
  • oxygen- combines with iron to form rust
    (oxidation)
  • Acid precipitation (rain)
  • Acids in ground water
  • Acids in living things

11
Oxygen
  • Iron combines with oxygen in the presence of
    water in a processes called Oxidation.
  • The product of oxidation is rust.

12
Acid Precipitation or Rain
  • Compounds from burning coal, oil and gas react
    chemically with water forming acids.
  • Acid rain causes very rapid chemical weathering.

13
Water
  • Ground Water weathers rock by dissolving it.
  • CaCO3 2CH3COOH Ca(CH3COO)2 H2O CO2.
  • Read more http//www.ehow.com/info_7888211_vineg
    ar-affect-limestone.html
  • The dissolved rock is carried by water and later
    deposited.
  • Examples are Stalactites and stalagmites

14
Living Organisms
  • Lichens and mosses that grow on rocks produce
    weak acids that chemically weather rock.

15
2 factors that determine the rate of weathering
  • Rock Type - Rock that is permeable (has holes in
    it), weathers faster than rock that is
    impermeable.
  • - The mineral content of rock also determines
    how fast a rock weathers.
  • Climate - Rock weathers faster in warm, humid
    climates.

16
Erosion
  • Erosion is the movement of sediment by water,
    wind or ice.
  • In this picture taken in Oregon, a gully has been
    created by a stream that has cut a path through
    soft sediment after a strong rainfall.

17
Erosion
  • Erosion has caused this bank in Squaw Creek to be
    cut away by the weathering of the river, forming
    a landform that simulates a partial cave on the
    left side of this picture.

18
Erosion
  • Here, erosion by longshore drift, has caused a
    lagoon to form along this beach in Costa Rica.

19
Deposition
  • Deposition is the
  • adding of sediment in
  • an area as it settles
  • out and forms new
  • landforms. In this
  • picture, taken in
  • Squaw Creek, near Sisters, Oregon, rocks have
    been deposited along the bank of the river after
    heavy rains.

20
Deposition
  • In this picture, also taken in Squaw Creek, a
    sandbar has been formed by sediment that has been
    washed down the river. This might also be
    considered a spit.

21
Deposition
  • In this picture, salt has been deposited in the
    Great Salt Lake, Utah. You can see the salt
    deposits. They appear as white areas on the edge
    of the water.

22
Landforms
  • http//www.classzone.com/books/earth_science/terc/
    content/visualizations/es1205/es1205page01.cfm?cha
    pter_novisualization

23
Erosion Control Methods
  • These native plants were left undisturbed on the
    beach in Costa Rica, so that they would hold in
    the sand and prevent erosion on the beach. This
    is an example of permanent erosion control.

24
other examples of erosion control
silt fencing
terracing
25
River Formation
  • A river is a natural stream of freshwater that is
    larger than a brook or creek. Rivers are normally
    the main channels or largest tributaries of
    drainage systems. Typical rivers begin with a
    flow from headwater areas made up of small
    tributaries, such as springs. They then travel in
    meandering paths at various speeds. Finally, they
    discharge or flow out into desert basins, into
    major lakes, or most likely, into oceans.

26
Erosion and Deposition
  • Meanders are formed by the weathering of one bank
    of a river and the deposition of the weathered
    sediment on the opposite bank of the river. This
    creates a loop-like bend in a river, such as this
    one. This view was taken from an airplane over a
    mountain range in the midwest.

27
changes in a meandering river
  • http//www.classzone.com/books/earth_science/terc/
    content/visualizations/es1306/es1306page01.cfm?cha
    pter_novisualization
  • formation of an oxbow lake
  • http//www.cleo.net.uk/resources/displayframe.php?
    src309/consultants_resources2F_files2Fmeander4.
    swf

28
  • The world's longest river is the Nile River in
    Africa, which runs 4,187 miles (6,739 kilometers)
    from its source in Burundi to the Mediterranean
    Sea.

29
  • Every river has a point of origin- it is the
    highest point in the water basin.
  • Gravity- is important rivers almost always flow
    downhill watercourse.
  • Some rivers start from springs, especially in
    humid climates. Springs occur as groundwater
    rises to Earth's surface and flows away.
  • Other rivers originate from lakes, marshes, or
    runoff from melting glaciers located high in the
    mountains. Some rivers have their beginnings in
    huge glaciers.

30
(STOP) LESSON 3Steps to River Formation
  • 1) Precipitation (rainwater or snow ) is the
    source of the water for most rivers.
  • 2)When a heavy rain falls on ground that is
    steeply sloped or is already saturated with
    water, water runoff trickles down Earth's surface
    rather than being absorbed- this is called
    surface runoff.
  • 3) After it travels a short distance, the water
    begins to run in small parallel rivulets called
    rills.
  • 4) As these rills pass over fine soil or silt,
    they begin to dig shallow channels, called
    gullies. This is the first stage of erosion. A
    gully only has water in it when it rains.
  • 5) A stream is formed when gullies join together.
    It is a channel along which water is continually
    flowing down a slope. Streams rarely dry up.
  • 6) A stream grows larger as it gets water from
    tributaries. A tributary is a stream that flows
    into a larger stream.

31
Visual steps to river formation
Rills
32
gullies
33
River System
34
Notes quiz
  • 1. Examples of mechanical weathering are
  • ice wedging, animal actions, oxidation
  • plant growth, ice wedging, abrasion
  • freezing and thawing, burrowing, acid rain
  • 2. Examples of chemical weathering are
  • a) acid rain, oxidation, plant roots
  • b) freezing and thawing, animal actions,
    oxidation
  • c) burrowing, carbon dioxide, abrasion

35
  • 3. Deposition is
  • the movement of sediment or rock
  • the settling out of sediment or rock
  • the breaking down of sediment or rock
  • 4. A meander is
  • a) a small river that runs into a larger river
  • b) a loop-like bend in a river
  • c) a lake that has been cut off from a river

36
  • 5) Name 3 methods of erosion control
  • a)
  • b)
  • c)
  • 6) What are 2 factors that affect the rate of
    weathering?
  • a) ______________________
  • b) ______________________
  • 7) What is surface run-off?

37
  • 8) Rills in soil run together to form __________
    that only have water in them when it rains.
  • 9) What forms when gullies join together?
  • a) a rill
  • b) a stream
  • c) a tributary
  • 10) What is the original source of water of most
    rivers? (1st step in river formation)
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