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Shaping Earth’s Surface

Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

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Page 1: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

•Shaping Earth’s Surface

Page 2: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

• Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

Page 3: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

• The Earth is constantly undergoing gradual changes

• The Earth is moved by weathering, erosion, and then transported to different areas on the Earth.

Page 4: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

• Weathering

Page 5: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

• Importance of Weathering– Participates in the rock cycle– Used in the formation of soils– Helps in the movement of rock material over the Earth’s

surface.

Page 6: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

• Erosion– Weathering breaks the rocks into fragments– Erosion then transports the material to new places of the

Earth– This is the physical process of removing the weathered

material.

Page 7: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

• Transportation– The movement of eroded materials by rivers, glaciers,

wind, or waves.– As material is transported the weathering and erosion

process continues

Page 8: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

• This famous natural bridge is an example of a landform created by the sculpturing power of weathering and erosion. It is Rainbow Bridge in the Rainbow Bridge National Monument, Utah.

Page 9: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

• The piles of rocks and rock fragments around a mass of solid rock is evidence that the solid rock is slowly crumbling away. This solid rock that is crumbling to rock fragments is in the Grand Canyon, Arizona.

Page 10: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

• Mechanical Weathering– The physical breaking of rock material without any

change to their chemical composition– Exfoliation

• Spalling off layers of rock• Caused by reduced pressure on rocks as material is

removed from above.– Frost wedging

• Caused as pores or cracks become filled with water and then freeze and thaw.

• As the process repeats cracks and pores become larger• Eventually the rock will break off.

Page 11: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

• (A)Frost wedging and (B) exfoliation are two examples of

mechanical weathering, or disintegration, of solid rock.

Page 12: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

• Growing trees can break, separate, and move solid rock. (A) Note how this tree has raised the sidewalk. (B) This tree is surviving by growing roots into tiny joints and cracks, which become larger as the tree grows.

Page 13: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

• Spheroidal weathering of granite. The edges and corners of an angular rock are attacked by weathering from more than one side and retreat faster than flat rock faces. The result is rounded granite boulders, which often shed partially weathered minerals in onion-like layers.

Page 14: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

• Chemical Weathering– The alteration of materials by chemical reactions which

do change the chemical composition of the material.– Oxidation

• When oxygen reacts with minerals in rocks– Carbonation

• A reaction between carbonic acid and minerals in rocks

– Hydration• A reaction between water and the minerals in rocks.• Dissolves material• Water combines with the mineral to form a hydrate

Page 15: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

• Limestone caves develop when slightly acidic groundwater dissolves limestone along joints and bedding planes, carrying away rock components in solution. (A) Joints and bedding planes in a limestone bluff. (B) This stream has carried away less-resistant rock components, forming a cave under the ledge.

Page 16: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

• Soils

Page 17: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

• Soils– Soil is a mixture of unconsolidated weathered Earth

materials and humus

• Humus– Decayed organic matter

• Bedrock– Solid rock below the soil

• Loam– A soil that is a mixture of sand, silt, and clay– Also referred to as topsoil

Page 18: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

• Erosion

Page 19: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

• Mass Movement– Criteria

• Material– bedrock that has been weathered and eroded– debris that is carried away during the mass movement.

• Rate– The speed at which the movement occurs

• Type– Fall– Slip

» Slump» Slide

– Flow

Page 20: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

– Creep• The slow downhill movement of soil down a steep

slope– Fall

• material moves in free fall down a cliff– Slip - materials moving together along a surface

• Slump - Movement along a curved surface• Slide - Movement along a plane parallel to the surface.

– Flow – Mass movement of a liquid

Page 21: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

• The slow creep of soil is evidenced by the strange growth pattern of these trees.

Page 22: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

• Running Water– Stream Channels

• Move materials in 3 ways.– As dissolved material in a solution– As materials carried in suspension– As sand and larger materials rolled, bounced, and

slid along with a stream• Most of the erosion that a stream does is done by the

larger material that moves along with it on the stream bed.

Page 23: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

• Moving streams of water carry away dissolved materials and sediments as they slowly erode the land.

Page 24: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

– Stream Erosion and Deposit Features• Floodplain

– The wide, level floor of the valley adjacent to a stream that has been built by the stream over time.

– This is the area that the stream will begin to move into when moisture is high (flood).

– A young stream usually has a v shaped flood plain whereas a mature stream has a flattened floodplain.

• Delta– Where the stream empties into an ocean or a lake it

loses all of its sediment carrying ability– The sediments are deposited at the mouth of the

stream and form a deposit

Page 25: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

• A river usually stays in its channel, but during a flood it spills over and onto the adjacent flat land called the floodplain.

Page 26: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

• Three stages in the aging and development of a stream valley, (A) youth, (B) maturity, and (C) old age.

Page 27: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

• The waterfall and rapids on the Yellowstone River in Wyoming indicate that the river is actively down cutting. Note the V-shaped cross-profile and lack of floodplain, characteristics of a young stream valley.

Page 28: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

• (A)Delta of Nooksack River, Washington. Note the sediment-laden water, and how the land is being built outward by river sedimentation. (B) Cross section showing how a small delta might form. Large deltas are more complicated than this.

Page 29: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

• Glaciers – A mass of ice on land that moves under its own weight.– Origin of Glaciers

• As snow melts and refreezes it is turned into ice.• After years of repeated thawing of snow and refreezing

into ice, the weight above begins to pack down the ice below.

• The increased pressure drives out air and reforms the ice into a crystalline structure of interlocking ice crystals with a very high mass

• Alpine glaciers form in high elevations• Valley glaciers form and flow downhill through a valley• Continental glaciers cover large areas of a continent.

Page 30: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

• Valley glacier on Mount Logan, Yukon Territory.

Page 31: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

– Glacial Erosion and Deposition• A glacier erodes material by:

– Bulldozing– Abrasion– Plucking

• Material; that is deposited by a glacier forms a moraine

• Plucking material produces a depression called a cirque

• As abrasion continues material becomes ground into fine sediment called rock flour.

Page 32: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

• (A)A stream-carved mountainside before glaciation. (B) The same area after glaciation, with some of the main features of mountain glaciation labeled.

Page 33: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

• Wind– Wind Erosion and Transportation

• Wind abrasion is the sandblasting process that occurs as material is carried along with wind.

• Deflation is the picking up of loose materials from the Earth’s surface.

– Wind Deposits• Dunes

– A low mound or ridge of material sediments– Form where the wind that is carrying the sediment

encounters some obstruction• Loess

– Very fine dust or silt that is deposited over large areas.– The source of the material is thought to be rock flour

from glacier action

Page 34: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

• Ventifact formation by abrasion from one or several directions.

Page 35: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

• Development of Landscapes

Page 36: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

• Rock Structure– Type of rock

• igneous• metamorphic• Sedimentary

– If they have been disturbed by faulting or folding

Page 37: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

• Weathering and Erosion Process– Controlled by climate and elevation

• State of Development– How effectively the landscape has been attacked by

erosion processes

Page 38: Shaping Earth’s Surface. Weathering, Erosion, and Transportation

• This melting glacier (A) is the source for a stream (B) that flows through a valley in the youth stage.