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Aim: What is Erosion? Objective: Ability to differentiate the different type of weathering Vocabulary: mechanical weathering, chemical weathering, carbonation, oxidation, hydrolysis Catalyst, sediment, glaciers
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Interactions of the Spheres
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Definition of Erosion Process in which weathered pieces of the lithosphere are moved from on place to another Occurs because of Weathering
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Weathering Is the decay of rocks, minerals, mountains, and other hard surfaces of the earth The decay breaks larger particles into smaller ones The decay can either be mechanical or chemical or both
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Physical Weathering Gravity Running Water Freeze-Thaw Cycle Wind Glacier
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What happens when two rocks bang into each other? Little chips of the rocks break off Sometimes large chips, sometimes small ones. Multiply that by 1,000,000 years Will the original rocks be larger or smaller Mechanical Weathering
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Freeze-Thaw Cycle If you put a can of soda in the freezer what happens? The same things happens in nature when water freezes Over millions of years – changes the lithosphere breaking parts of it into millions of pieces
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Freeze Thaw
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Frost Wedging
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Freeze Thaw Cycle When the rock finally breaks up there, what causes it to fall ?
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Man on the Mountain, NH
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This Process Created:
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What happens when water rushes down a mountain Brings everything with it Soil Rocks Now multiply that effect by 10,000,000 years
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How dramatic can the effect be? Most of the sand deposits on the east coast are the weathered remains of granite mountains from … Appalachian Mountains
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Running Water The faster the water runs, the larger the particles (sediment) the water is able to move !
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Running Water
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Moves things “down-stream” Created the Grand Canyon over 30,000,000 years Literally washed mountains down valleys And sometimes into the oceans Creates new landforms
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Running Water
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Running Water Creates Deltas
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Where did this whole landform come from?
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Abrasion
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Moving Water
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Plant Acids
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Glaciers Extremely Vast Regions of Ice/Snow Millions of Years Old Continental (Greenland – Antarctica) Mountain (Alpine) Glaciers
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Glaciers Move rock and sediment in their path When they retreat (melt), the carried remains are left behind Formed Long Island – last Ice Age Sometimes they form hill, and lakes Drumlins and the Finger Lakes
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Chemical Weathering Chemical weathering is where the rock material is changed into another substance by reacting with a chemical. 1. Oxidation: 2. Hydrolysis:
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Oxidation is another form of chemical weathering Your bicycle if made of iron What happens to it in the rain Turns to rust Oxygen + Iron = Iron Oxide (rust) Water is a catalyst = speeds up the process
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Weathering can also be chemical Carbon dioxide (air) mixes with water (rain) to form carbonic acid Carbonic acid can dissolve some sedimentary rocks – particularly limestone Over millions of years this forms large caves and caverns. (Howe Caverns) Often when water combines with limestone or marble an acid is formed
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Howe Caverns
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Limestone Cave
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Hydrolysis is another form of chemical weathering Water has a tendency to dissolve other substances Water is called the universal solvent When water combines with another substance is called hydrolysis
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Rates of weathering will be influenced by surface area: More surface exposed, the faster the weathering will occur.
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1. What type of steam carries more sediment? a)Fast moving b)Slow moving c)No correlation
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2. What type of steam cause more erosion? a)Fast moving b)Slow moving c)No correlation
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3. During a heavy rain, a stream probably moves a)Faster b)Slower c)No correlation
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4. During a heavy rain, there is probably _______ erosion a)more b)less c)No correlation
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5. During a hurricane, there is probably _______ erosion a)more b)less c)No correlation
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6. There is more gravitational erosion on a ______ slope. a)Steep b)gentle c)No correlation
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7. There is more erosion on a ______ flowing stream a)Steep sloping b)Gentle sloping c)No correlation
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8. Freeze-Thaw reactions a)Create sediment b)Reverse seditment c)No correlation
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9. How was Long Island created 1. Chemical Weathering 2. Erosion 3. Glaciers (glaciations)
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10. Deltas are created from 1. Wave Action 2. Carried sediment from upstream 3. Glaciers
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