Download Information on Weathering and Erosion

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» Weathering is the breakdown and the wearing a
way of rocks.
» Wind action removes rock grain by grain.
» Running water in streams and rivers wears
rocks into smaller and smoother particles.
» Extremes and changes in temperature cause
rocks to crack and split as they expand and
contract.
» Water can also enter porous (contains holes)
rocks and freeze causing the rock to break
apart.
» Exfoliation can occur as sheets or slabs of the cracked
rock slip off.
» As waves move, small fragments of rock fall away and
are washed away.
» Plants can force their roots into cracks of rocks and, as
the roots grow they cause the rocks to break apart.
Some lichens and moss grow on the surface of rocks,
eventually eating into the rocks and causing them to
split and break away.
» Animals can also trample and crush rock. This, over a
long time, wears them away.
» (Plant action or animal weathering is also known as
biological weathering.)
Water Weathering
Wind Weathering
» Acid weathering is when rainwater mixes with
gases such as carbon dioxide in the air as it falls.
The resulting carbonic acid dissolves rock such
as limestone and sandstone.
» Oxidation occurs, in its most common form,
when iron particles in rock combine with water
and oxygen to form a coloured layer of oxidised
mineral.
» Erosion is the washing away or removal of
weathered fragments of rock.
» Water Erosion – This is where the material is
moved away by water.
» Wave Erosion – This is where materials are
moved away by the action of waves.
» Ice Erosion – This is when materials are moved
away by ice, usually in the form of a glacier.
Glacial Erosion
Wave Erosion