weathering processes. weathering 1.weathering vs. erosion 2.joints: setting the stage 3.physical...

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Weathering Processes

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Page 1: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

Weathering Processes

Page 2: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

Weathering

1. Weathering vs. Erosion

2. Joints: Setting the Stage

3. Physical (Mechanical) Weathering

4. Chemical Weathering

Page 3: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

1. Weathering vs. Erosion

Common Error Made in K-12 Earth

Science Teaching: these are synonyms

No!

Weathering – chemically dissolving candy or physically crunching candy – breakdown in place

Erosion – moving pieces (dissolved or as fragments)

Page 4: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

1st - Weathering = decay in place

2nd - Detach = break off

3rd Erode = move

Page 5: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

1st – decayed

2nd – detached

3rd – eroded

Page 6: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

s

Page 7: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

2. Joints: Setting the StageJoints – fractures (that allow water to

penetrate and weather the rock)

Many ways to make joints:

Cooling & contraction Tectonic Stresses

Page 8: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

Very different!

Page 9: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

Columnar Jointing

From contraction

after lava flow cools

Page 10: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

or faulting/folding

stresses the rock

Page 11: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

Joints can even fracture sedimentary strata from regional tectonic pressures

Page 12: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

3. Physical (Mechanical) Weathering

• Frost weathering

• Pressure release weathering

• Salt Weathering

• Thermal Expansion/Contraction

• Wedging (Fissuresols & Calcrete)

• Wetting/Drying

• Root pressure

Page 13: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

Frost Weathering

Page 14: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

Breaks rock along small fractures

Page 15: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

Breaks rock along large fractures& produces jagged alpine topography

Page 16: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

Aesthetic, so used in commercials

Page 17: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

Pressure Release

Sometimes called “exfoliation” (like exfoliating skin) – incorrect usage

pressure release shells

Page 18: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

Erosionremovesoverburden &shells pop offas pressure isreleased

Page 19: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

Glacial Erosion Great Way to Generate Pressure Release

Page 20: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

Salt Weathering

Salt is common in deserts

Salt is common along coasts

Page 21: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

Mechanics of Salt Weathering• Salt Crystal Growth: Extreme

pressures in cracks and rock pores are

caused by salt crystal growth from

solution. There are varying causes of

and extents to which salt growth occurs.

• Hydration: The hydration of various salts

causes expansion & contraction, pushing

apart the silicate host minerals

• Thermal Expansion:

During temperature

fluctuations, salts

trapped in pores may

expand to a greater

degree than the

surrounding rock

minerals.

Page 22: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

Caverns (tafoni)

Base of rock notching (basal weathering)

Wedging

Page 23: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

Caverns (tafoni – larger

cavernous forms)

Page 24: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

(Goudie and Viles, 1997:168)

Page 25: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

Caverns (alveoli – smaller cavernous forms)

Page 26: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

Weathering along bases of rocks

Page 27: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

Wedging

Page 28: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

Sequence in Rock Fractures

Page 29: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

Generalized Process

Page 30: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

Fissuresol wedging can pry apart bedrock

Page 31: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

Fissuresol wedging can pry apart

mountain sides and

giant boulders

Page 32: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

Thermal Expansion/Contraction

• Thermal Expansion/Contraction

Page 33: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

A bit of moisture & sudden heat makes the rock pop

Page 34: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

Vermillion Cliffs

Wetting/Drying

Page 35: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

Root Pressure

Page 37: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

Physical weathering “sets up” chemical weathering

Page 38: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

Why do you ground coffee?to increase surface area

Page 39: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

4. Chemical WeatheringEgyptian Obelisk – chemically weathered

when brought to wetter environment, so water matters!

Page 40: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

DissolutionSugar & Salt Dissolves – so do rocks

Best example: limestone

Page 41: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering
Page 42: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

Other rocks dissolve too, but slower than limestone

Page 43: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

Acid Rain Accelerates Decay

Crosses political boundaries …

Page 44: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

Taj Mahal Athens

Page 45: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

Oxidation

Page 46: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

Hydrolysis

Water molecules at the mineral surface dissociate into H+ and OH- and the mobile H+ ions penetrate the crystal lattice, creating a charge imbalance, that causes cations (important nutrients) such as Ca2+ , Mg2+, K+ and Na+ to diffuse out. For example, the feldspar reacts to decay and leaves a residue of clay mineral.

H+

OH-

H+

Page 47: Weathering Processes. Weathering 1.Weathering vs. Erosion 2.Joints: Setting the Stage 3.Physical (Mechanical) Weathering 4.Chemical Weathering

Hydration

Water alters structure

Complexation Metals released from primary minerals such as iron and manganese build complexes with organic components, such as fulvic acids and humic acids, causing an imbalance between cations and anions – that leads to mineral decay