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Weathering wears rocks at the Earth’s surface down into smaller pieces. The two types of weathering are: Physical (Mechanical) Weathering: occurs when fragments of rock break off due to wind, changing temperature, tree growth, or water freezing inside cracks in the rock. Chemical Weathering: occurs when minerals in rock are dissolved or otherwise chemically changed by acidic water (hydrolysis) or rusting (oxidation). http://www.brainpop.com/science/weather/weathering/ The small fragments produced by weathering are called sediment. This includes broken pieces of rock, sand, silt, clay and chemical precipitates (the solid materials left behind after a liquid evaporates). • Erosion occurs when these sediments are removed from rock by running water, ice, or gravity. • During sedimentation, which is also known as deposition, the sediments are laid down or deposited, and remain where they lay unless moved by some other agent of erosion. http://www.brainpop.com/science/earthsystem/erosion/ Rock Cycle-Continuous changing and remaking of rocks. Any of the 3 types of rocks can be transformed into another type of rock by natural Earth processes. http://www.brainpop.com/scienc e/earthsystem/rockcycle/ https://www.youtube.com/watch ?v=pm6cCg_Do6k Igneous rock is formed from the crystallization (cooling and hardening) of magma. Granite-Makes up Earth’s continental crust. Basalt-Makes up Earth’s oceanic crust. Igneous rock can form in many different environments. The chemical composition of the magma and the rate at which it cools will determine what type of igneous rock forms. Igneous rocks can cool slowly beneath the surface or rapidly above the surface. As the magma cools, the rate of cooling will determine how much time the crystals have to form. Slow cooling produces larger crystals, while fast cooling produces smaller crystals. The size of the crystals that make up a rock are used to help classify the rock. Sedimentary rock forms from the compaction and cementing together of sediments after deposition. Examples include sandstone and limestone. Bedding is the horizontal layering of sedimentary rocks. Bedding can occur in very thin layers or in very thick layers, and be graded or criss-crossed. Graded Bedding Cross-bedding Imagine you are apart of a parent rock and suddenly you find yourself weathered and are now a piece of sediment. I want you to write at least ½ of a page describing your journey. What did you see? Why did you get weathered? What is causing you to erode? Where do you end up? What are some interesting things you saw on your journey? Metamorphic rock forms when igneous or sedimentary rocks are changed by heat and/or pressure below Earth’s surface. The heat allows atoms to rearrange themselves. Examples are gneiss and marble. When a rock is exposed to extreme heat and pressure within the Earth but does not melt, the rock becomes metamorphosed. Metamorphism may change the mineral composition and/or the texture of the rock. Metamorphic rock is classified into two groups. Foliated: having long wavy layers of crystal that are perpendicular to the pressure that formed the rock. Non-Foliated: having blocky crystal shapes that do not line up in any one direction under the pressure that formed the rock. Foliated Gneiss Non-foliated Marble Igneous Rock Formation: Sedimentary and metamorphic rock can be melted down, and then cooled to form igneous rock. Sedimentary Rock Formation: Igneous or metamorphic rocks can become weathered and eroded and then lithified (compacted and cemented) into sedimentary rocks. Metamorphic Rock Formation: Igneous and sedimentary rock can be transformed by heat or pressure to form metamorphic rock. http://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/ks3/science/environment_earth _universe/rock_cycle/activity/ • The rock cycle demonstrates the relationships among the three major rock groups. • It is powered by the interior heat of the Earth as well as earth’s momentum and the energy from the sun. • It involves processes on the Earth’s surface as well as the Earth’s interior. • It connects the “hydrologic cycle” with the “tectonic cycle”. Summary • The three main rock types are igneous, metamorphic and sedimentary. • The three processes that change one rock to another are crystallization, metamorphism, and erosion and sedimentation. • Any rock can transform into any other rock by passing through one or more of these processes. This creates the rock cycle. http://www.phschool.com/atschool/phsciexp/active_art/rock_cycle/index.html