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Weathering, erosion, soils and deposition, and glaciers
EARTH SCIENCE Weathering, erosion, soils and deposition, and glaciers
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WEATHERING THE BREAK DOWN OF EARTH MATERIALS FOR EXAMPLE: BREAKING A ROCK APART WITH TREE ROOTS
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TYPES OF WEATHERING CHEMICAL CARBONATION HYDRATION OXIDATION ACID RAIN
PHYSICAL Exfoliation PLANT ACTION FROST ACTION ABRASION CHEMICAL CARBONATION HYDRATION OXIDATION ACID RAIN
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Physical Weathering Ice Wedges water seeps into cracks in rock, freezes and expands, melts and contracts, forcing the rock to crumble.
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CHEMICAL WEATHERING Ex. ACID RAIN
The acid rain changes the chemical composition of rocks . The new composition tends to be weaker and more easily broken apart
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CLIMATE & WEATHERING RATES
COLD/MOIST CLIMATES PHYSICAL WEATHERING ex. frost action reason for potholes
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CLIMATES AND WEATHERING RATES
WARM/MOIST CHEMICAL WEATHERING most chemical processes naturally speed up with warmer temperatures and water
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Weathering rates
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Which will weather the fastest?
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EROSION (carries weathered material away)
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Gravity - driving force
AGENTS OF EROSION Wind Running Water Glaciers Gravity - driving force
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WIND EROSION YouTube - Sand storm
Sediments that have been eroded by wind tend to appear frosted and pitted dune formation
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Running Water Erosion Sediments eroded by running water tend to appear rounded and smooth running water is the dominant agent of erosion example
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Glacial Erosion Sediments eroded by a glacier tend to appear elongated and scratched from the heavy mass of ice dragging sediments away.
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Gravity : landslide Sediments eroded by gravity form unsorted piles of angular rock pieces called talus.
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Factors Affecting sediment transportation in a stream
Gradient (slope) steeper slope, faster flow, more erosion discharge of a stream greater volume, faster flow, more erosion channel shape straighter the shape, faster flow, more erosion
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Gradient The steeper the slope the faster the stream flow
The faster the flow, the more erosion.
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Stream Discharge Discharge is the total amount of water passing a certain point. The more water passing a certain point, the more erosion occurs.
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Channel Shape - meanders
Water travels fastest on the outside of the bend (more EROSION) Water travels slowest on the inside of the bend (more DEPOSITION)
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Deposition The process by which transported materials are left in a new location (dropping off sediment)
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Factors causing Deposition
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GRADED BEDDING (Vertical Sorting)
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Horizontal Sorting (LARGEST to Smallest)
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Soil Horizons mature soil has well developed layers C-horizon mostly incomplete in NYS d/t glaciers
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Types of Soil RESIDUAL- soil that obtains characteristics of parent bedrock below it TRANSPORTED- soil that does not share characteristics of parent bedrock below it
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Landscape Regions
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Landscape regions in NYS
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ARID LANDSCAPES DRY lack vegetation poorly developed soil layers
steep cliffs
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Humid Landscapes WET climates lots of vegetation
well developed soil layers smooth rounded hill tops
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Drainage patterns (how water flows off the land)
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GLACIERS Observe how glaciers erode bedrock surfaces.
High altitudes high latitudes occurs any place where more snow falls during the winter than melts during the summer
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Glacial features U shaped valleys
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Glacial Features Glacial Till (UNSORTED)
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Glacial features finger lakes
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Glacial Features kettle lakes
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Glacial features Erratics (boulders left behind from a glacier)
moraine (sediments carried and deposited by glaciers eskers (winding ridges of glacial material deposited in streams
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Glacial Movement Striations (scratches) on bedrock indicate direction of movement Drumlins (hills shaped like the back of a spoon)
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Dynamic Equilibrium
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