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Erosion, Deposition AND SOIL FORMATION

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Presentation on theme: "Erosion, Deposition AND SOIL FORMATION"— Presentation transcript:

1 Erosion, Deposition AND SOIL FORMATION
Actions That Change Earth’s Surface

2 Weathering: a review… Physical or Chemical processes that break down rocks. Mechanical weathering: ice wedging, root pry, exfoliation, etc. Chemical weathering: oxidation (iron + oxygen + water = rust), acid precipitation (from burning fossil fuels: sulfur, carbon dioxide, and nitrogen), plant acids (lichens)

3 What affects the rate of weathering?
The type of rock: mineral composition Surface area: smaller rocks have a greater surface area and weather faster Climate (temperature and precipitation): hot/warm and wet/humid weather fastest

4 What is erosion? Erosion is the transport (movement) of weathered rocks and sediment from one place to another. Erosion is usually gradual… Humans can speed it up.

5 What are the agents of erosion?
Wind Water Waves Glaciers (ice) Gravity (mass movement, mass wasting)

6 What is deposition? What goes up must come down.
What is carried must be… dropped. Deposition occurs when agents of erosion deposit (lay down, drop) sediment.

7 How does gravity change Earth’s surface?
Rapid Mass Wasting… Landslide Mudflow

8 Erosion and Deposition
Gravity- pulls materials downhill Running Water- water has great power Rill erosion- water running in small channels down a slope Gulley- When a channel becomes deep and wide

9 How does slow mass wasting erode rocks?
Creep Slump

10 How does water change Earth's surface?
Running water Load deposits

11 How is a river's load deposited?
Delta Alluvial fan

12 How do waves change Earth's surface?
Sand bars Longshore drift

13 Coastal Deposition & Erosion
Much of what is weathered is carried to a coast When a river hits the oceans, it slows down, dropping its load of sediment Ocean waves, currents, and tide continue erosion

14 How do glaciers change Earth's surface?
Large mass of moving ice and snow Abrasion

15 Glacial Erosion Currently Cover <10% of Earth
Very Powerful, polish grind, scratch surfaces Form valleys, waterfalls, lakes

16 How does wind change Earth's surface?
Sand dunes

17 Wind Erosion Major forces where low precipitation, high temperature and no plant cover = sandblasting

18 Plants, Animals and People
Move soil around Buildings, highways, etc.

19 Formation of Soil Soil- loose covering of broken rock, decaying organic matter (humus) covering Earth’s surface Soil Formation- Beginning: weathering breaks solid bedrock into smaller pieces Organic (living) matter added; organisms die, decay (decomposers)

20 Soil Composition Parent Material- bedrock “gives birth to soil”
Residual Soil- just above parent material Transported Soil- soil moved to a location far away from parent bedrock Think Running Water, Wind, Glaciers

21 Soil Profiles- a vertical sequence of layers
Horizons- distinct layers of soil O- All leaf litter, top layer A- organic mixed with rock fragments B- Sub Soil, rich in clay C- between B and bedrock, mostly broken pieces of rock Topography affects thickness of soil, hillsides loose soil to erosion

22 Soil Textures Clay- smallest particles Silt- slightly larger
Sand- larger Loam- combination of the three

23 Soil Fertility How well a soil can support plant growth Factors
Mineral/nutrients, microorganisms, precipitation, topography and acidity Fertilizer adds nitrates, potassium, phosphorus Legumes (peas and beans) add microorganisms and nitrates to soil as they grow

24 What caused the Dust Bowl in the 1930s?
Poor soil conservation…


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