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Published byCade Barnicle Modified over 10 years ago
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Geology 12 Presents
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Sedimentary Rocks Weathering and Erosion
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Weathering: the physical breakdown (disintegration) and chemical alteration (decomposition) of minerals and rocks at of near the Earth’s surface Erosion: removal of weathered material (by water, wind, or ice)
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3 Types of Weathering: 1. Physical/Mechanical Weathering: –Physical forces break rocks into smaller pieces without changing chemistry –4 kinds a)Frost action/ice wedging: water seeps into cracks, freezes, expands (9%) and pushes rock apart. Most effective in areas where temperature fluctuates above & below 0’C animation link
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Joints = rock fractures cliff Talus = debris accumulation Ice wedging
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3 Types of Weathering 1. Physical (Mechanical) Weathering: –a) Ice Frost Wedging
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Ice Frost Wedging
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Talus = fallen rock debris
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Talus cone
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b) pressure release: many minerals/rocks are formed under immense pressure. When they are uplifted and exposed through erosion, the pressure is greatly reduced. The rock expands forming layer of fractures (joints) Sheet joints
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Exfoliation: slabs of rock break along sheet joints and fall off Popping/rock bursts: sudden pressure relief in deep mines rock explodes like a grenade injuring/killing miners before after Exfoliation dome
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B) Pressure Release
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Exfoliation Dome: Chief
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c) Thermal expansion & contraction: rock is a poor heat conductor; in deserts where the temperatures rise and fall 30’C/day, the outside of the rock heats- expands and cools-contracts animation animation daynight + dark minerals get hotter than white minerals
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C) Thermal Expansion and Contraction
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d) Salt crystal growth: salts in rock crevices grow. Expand prying the rock apart like ice wedging. Road salt in roads & bridges, inside of concrete foundation.
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D) Salt Crystal Growth
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2. Biological Weathering = activities of organisms a) animals: burrow, tramp, bring materials to surface for more weathering, help transmit gases and water to depths, etc. Animation Animation b) plants: roots wedge rocks apart Animation
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2. Biological Weathering A) Animals:Moles
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2. Biological Weathering A) Animals:ants
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2. Biological Weathering A) Animals:clams
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B:Plants:root wedging
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Lichens
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B) Plants Root Wedging
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3. Chemical Weathering: chemical alteration of rock/parent material 3 kinds a) Solution: a solid dissolves (halite, calcite) and is usually helped by CO 2 in water which forms carbonic acid (also in plant roots) Results in hard water, caves & karst topography (sink holes).
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3. Chemical Weathering A) Solution
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Sinkhole
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b) oxidation: reacts with oxygen to form oxides (rust). Ferromagnesians (olivine, pyroxene amphibole & biotite) combine with O 2 for form hematite or limonite. Hi sulfur/sulfide coal acid rain/runoff Iron sulfides (pyrite FeS 2 ) sulphuric acid + iron oxide
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B) Oxidation
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Chevy: like a rock all right!
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c) Hydrolysis: cations (metals) in minerals are replaced by H+ from water Ex: Potassium (K) Fs + water clay + K + silica Ex: Plagioclase Fs + water clay + (Na, Ca) + silica
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C) Hydrolysis
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Kaolinite clay
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Terminology: Differential Weathering: rocks that weather at different rates produce uneven surfaces Resistant cap rock plateau Mesa/butte Hodo/ pinnacle rock
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Differential Weathering Hard Caprock
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Spheroidal Weathering: reactangular rocks weather into roundish rocks because corners are attacked on 3 sides, edges on 2 sides, but flat planes on 1 side Result: rounded (& smaller) rocks
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Spheroidal Weathering
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Resistance to Weathering poor good
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Higher temperature minerals weather most easily (olivine, calcium-rich plagioclase) Lower temperature minerals weather least (quartz)
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That’s all folks! Do Ws 5.1 + look at Unit 1 Review WS + look at Unit 1 Review WS
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