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Weathering, Erosion and Deposition

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Weathering The breakdown do the materials of Earth s crust into smaller pieces. Physical Weathering Process by which rocks are broken down into smaller pieces by ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Weathering, Erosion and Deposition


1
Weathering, Erosion and Deposition
2
Weathering
  • The breakdown do the materials of Earths crust
    into smaller pieces.

3
Physical Weathering
  • Process by which rocks are broken down into
    smaller pieces by external conditions.
  • Types of Physical weathering
  • Frost heaving and Frost wedging
  • Plant roots
  • Friction and impact
  • Burrowing of animals
  • Temperature changes

4
Frost Wedging
5
Frost Heaving
6
Plant Roots
7
Friction and Repeated Impact
8
Burrowing of Animals
9
Temperature Changes
10
Chemical Weathering
  • The process that breaks down rock through
    chemical changes.
  • The agents of chemical weathering
  • Water
  • Oxygen
  • Carbon dioxide
  • Living organisms
  • Acid rain

11
Water
  • Water weathers rock by dissolving it

12
Oxygen
  • Iron combines with oxygen in the presence of
    water in a processes called oxidation
  • The product of oxidation is rust

13
Carbon Dioxide
  • CO2 dissolves in rain water and creates carbonic
    acid
  • Carbonic acid easily weathers limestone and marble

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

15
Acid Rain
  • Compounds from burning coal, oil and gas react
    chemically with water forming acids.
  • Acid rain causes very rapid chemical weathering

16
Karst Topography
  • A type of landscape in rainy regions where there
    is limestone near the surface, characterized by
    caves, sinkholes, and disappearing streams.
  • Created by chemical weathering of limestone

17
Features of Karst Sinkholes
18
Features of Karst Caves
19
Features of Karst Disappearing Streams
20
What Caused This?
http//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/FileWater_erosi
on_below_Hay_Bluff_-_geograph.org.uk_-_1074175.jpg
http//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/FileWind_erosio
n_Seminole_Canyon.JPG
THATS RIGHT! EROSION!
http//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/FileBaventian_C
lay_Beds_-_geograph.org.uk_-_1776748.jpg
21
Erosion
  • The process by which water, ice, wind or gravity
    moves fragments of rock and soil.

22
Water Erosion
  • Rivers, streams, and runoff

23
Ice Erosion
  • Glaciers

24
Wind Erosion
25
Mass Movements
  • Landslides, mudslides, slump and creep

landslide clip.mpeg
26
What is Deposition?
  • Laying down of sediment that has been transported
    by a medium such as wind, water, or ice
  • Process of erosion stops
  • when the moving particles fall out of the
    transporting medium and settle on a surface
  • Speed of the medium slows or the resistance of
    the particles increases, the balance changes and
    causes deposition
  • Speed can be reduced by large rocks, hills,
    vegetation, etc.

27
Deposition - Wind
  • Wind speed can be related to variations in
    heating and cooling.
  • Transportation of particles in wind
  • Fine particles in suspension hundreds of km from
    its original source in the desert
  • Heavier material may be blown along the ground.
  • Material is deposited when the wind changes
    direction or loses its strength.

http//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/FileDesert_Chih
uahuan_Big_Bend.JPG
28
Deposition - Water
  • Running water enters a large, fairly still body
    of water and its speed decreases.
  • SPEED
  • As the speed of the water decreases, the water's
    ability to carry sediment also decreases.
  • Deposited in streams, rivers, and oceans
  • Running water deposits sediments where the
    slowing water can no longer move them.
  • Largest particles are deposited near the shore.
  • Increasingly smaller particles settle out farther
    from the shore where the water is calmer.

http//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/FileEnchanted_R
ock,_stream.jpg
29
Delta a fan shaped deposit that forms at the
mouth of a river/stream when it enters a larger
body of water like an ocean or lake
30
Alluvial Fan - a fan shaped deposit of sediments
that forms when a stream/river flows out of a
mountain on to flat, dry plains. These are not
under water and are very visible. This only
happens on the land. You can call it a land
delta.
31
Deposition - Ice
  • Glacial flows of ice become slower when the ice
    begins melting
  • Deposits left by glaciers
  • The deposits of these rivers look similar to
    normal river deposits and are called outwashes.
  • Moraines are large chunks of broken rock left at
    the base and sides of the glacier as it melts and
    recedes.
  • Finer material is carried in the rivers that form
    when the glacial ice melts.

http//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/FileCavell_Glac
ier_with_Crevices_and_Annual_Rings.jpg
32
Whats the Difference?
  • WEATHERING Think of weather wearing rock down.
  • EROSION Think of a road and traveling.
  • DEPOSITION Think of depositing money into a
    bank.
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