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Mechanical (physical) Weathering. The process of breaking down sediment without changing the rocks chemical composition. Frost wedging. Physical Weathering. Biological activity (Mechanical Weathering) –(sometimes chemical). Tree roots splitting rock. Biological activity.
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Mechanical (physical) Weathering • The process of breaking down sediment without changing the rocks chemical composition. • Frost wedging
Biological activity (Mechanical Weathering) –(sometimes chemical) Tree roots splitting rock
Exfoliation (Mechanical Weathering) • Uplift of under rock causes the top hard rock, like granite, to split into layers.
Chemical Weathering • The transformation of rock into one or more new substances.
Chemical Weathering • Oxidation : Elements reacting with Oxygen ex. (Rust)
Feldspar +Water = Clay Feldspar A Clay Cliff
Acids (chemical weathering) • Old tombstones made of marble will weather due to the Carbonic Acid that is in rainwater.
Dissolution • Dissolving a rock in water
What can affect Mechanical and Chemical Weathering? Dissolving candy!!!! – I need a volunteer
Where does chemical weathering occur the fastest???????????? • Warm and Moist!!!!!! • Tropical rainforest
Where does mechanical weathering occur the fastest??? • Wet & temperate(warm day / cold night) • Frost Wedging!!!!! Buffalo, NY
Erosion – The process of moving weathered sediments from one location to another.
Water erodes more sediments than any other agent of erosion, due to its great energy of motion.
Deposition When water flows downhill or wind slows down it loses energy of motion, & drops its sediments. Large Sediment Med Sediment Small Sediment http://www.classzone.com/books/earth_science/terc/content/visualizations/es1303/es1303page01.cfm?chapter_no=visualization
Mass Movement • Gravity causes loose materials to move down a slope. When gravity alone causes materials to move down slope this erosion is called Mass Movement.
Slump • occurs when loose materials or rock layers slip downward as one large mass. It happens because the material under the slump weakens.
Creep • occurs when sediments slowly move downhill. As the ground freezes, small sediments are pushed up by the expanding water in the soil. As it thaws, the sediments fall down slope, often less than a millimeter at a time.
Rockslides • occur when large blocks of rock break loose from steep slopes and tumble quickly to the bottom. • Fastest form of Mass Movement Talus
Mudflows • usually occur in relatively dry areas where weathering forms thick layers of dry sediments. When heavy rains or rapid ice thawing happens, water mixes w/ the sediments & forms a thick mud. Gravity causes this mud to flow downhill.
All types of Mass Movement happen where there are slopes. All are more likely to happen after a heavy rain because water makes the sediments heavier & slippery.
Deflation • wind picking up and moving small sediments such as clay, silt, and sand.
Abrasion • wind making sand grains roll and skip, bumping into other grains and rocks. The surfaces they strike become pitted and polished when small fragments are broken off. (sandblasting) Glen Canyon, AZ