Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Weathering and Erosion

GEOGRAPHY 12


WEATHERING and EROSION NOTES


Text: Planet Earth pp 240 – 251


Landforms result from the uplift caused by tectonic forces and the processes of denudation (or LEVELLING).


The processes of denudation work to reduce land to BASE LEVEL, the lowest level to which a land surface can be eroded.


Denudation ca be divided into two categories:


1) DEGRADATION includes the processes of:


A) WEATHERING(breaking up of rock near or at earth’s surface)


B) EROSION (removal and movement/transport of rock debris)



2)AGGRADATION (building up of land surface by deposition of rock materials – this occurs when a drop in energy SLOWS the transporting agent…e.g. rivers slow down at BASE LEVEL.)



  1. Weathering


reduces rocks to smaller particles


provides PARENT MATERIALS for the process of soil formation



Weathering can be divided into two types:


MECHANICAL or physical weathering is the breaking up of rocks without any change to their chemical composition



Examples of Physical/Mechanical Weathering


  1. FROST SHATTERING or ICE WEDGING- water seeps into cracks and joints, freezes and splits the rock apart




  1. THERMAL EXPANSION - rocks composed of different crystals contract and expand with temperature change at different rates…this causes the rocks to eventually disintegrate


3)PRESSURE RELEASE (sheeting) or pressure release is the separation of layers in granite due to the removal of overburden and the release of pressure…these features often form rounded exfoliation domes




4) Animals and plant roots can also weather rock.




5) In deserts, evaporation leaves behind salt CRYSTALS in rock pores and fissures. As these grow they can wedge rocks apart.








Chemical Weathering is the break up of rocks due to A CHANGE IN THE CHEMICAL COMPOSITION OF THE MINERALS IN WHICH MAKE THEM UP .




  1. SOLUTION - rainwater, which is naturally weakly acidic, reacts with SOLUBLE minerals, dissolving them and carrying them away.

LIMESTONE, a commonly used building material is very prone to solution.


  1. OXIDATION - the process of combining oxygen with a mineral.


  1. HYDROLYSIS - ions of water replace ions of a mineral which produces amongst other things, clays.





The rate of weathering depends on a number of factors.


Explain how the following factors may contribute to the rate and amount of weathering:


  1. Nature of bedrock – THE COMPOSITION OF IT, SIZE OF IT, JOINTS.

  2. Temperature - COLD AND DRY, WARM AND MOIST, SHOWS WHETHER IT'S MORE CHEMICALLY OR PHYSICALLY ERODING.





3) Precipitation – THE AMOUNT OF RAINFALL, HOW MOIST/ DENSE THE AIR IS. HOW MUCH SNOW (IF ANY).




    4) Slope/drainage – HOW MUCH WATER BUILD UP, BLOCKAGE, HOW MANY RIVERS/STREAMS TO CARRY SEDIMENTS AWAY.





We can generalize where chemical and physical and mechanical weathering are predominant:



Chemical weathering is most common in area that are …

Warm and moist, like California.





Mechanical/physical weathering is most common in area that are …

Cold and harsh, places with lots of hard rain, snow and ice.




Monday, March 29, 2010

Earthquakes, Folds and Faults.

Earthquakes, Folds and Faults.


1. Explain the relationship between earthquakes and plate tectonics. When certain tectonic plates have specific boundaries (such as transform faults and such) this can create tension build up. When the pressure is released, the tectonic plates will shake.




Why do earthquakes occur at places NOT on plate boundaries? Because it's not actually happening at the fault- it happens at the epicenter (the point on the ground directly above the focus, or hypocenter.)

2. Create labeled diagrams of the major types of faults - normal, reverse, overthrust, transform. Be sure to label movement direction and forces acting on the blocks.


Normal: http://www.uwsp.edu/geo/faculty/ritter/images/lithosphere/tectonics/normal_fault_labelled_diagram.jpg


Reverse: http://facweb.bhc.edu/academics/science/harwoodr/GEOL101/study/Images/ReverseFault.gif


Overthrust: http://wpcontent.answers.com/wikipedia/commons/c/ce/Fault-propagation_fold.gif


Transform: http://www.freewebs.com/morganisrupert/4_1.jpg




3. Describe the dangers associated with earthquakes. Earthquakes cause major structural damage, can initiate tsunamis and generate volcanoes, as well.

4. Diagram the major types of folds - anticline, syncline, dome, geosyncline.


Anticline: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/b6/Anticline_(PSF).png


Syncline:http://www.eoearth.org/upload/thumb/4/4e/Syncline_fold_diagram.gif/250px-Syncline_fold_diagram.gif


Dome: http://facweb.bhc.edu/academics/science/harwoodr/GEOG102/Study/images/Dome.gif