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Last time Viscosity determines the ability of a melt to releases gasses coming out of solution Viscosity depends on silica content and TEMPERATURE Mafic.

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Presentation on theme: "Last time Viscosity determines the ability of a melt to releases gasses coming out of solution Viscosity depends on silica content and TEMPERATURE Mafic."— Presentation transcript:

1 Last time Viscosity determines the ability of a melt to releases gasses coming out of solution Viscosity depends on silica content and TEMPERATURE Mafic (Basaltic) melts are extremely hot and have low silica, do not explode much Felsic (Granitic) melts are only moderately hot and have very high silica. Explode violently

2 Limestone dissolved by naturally acidic rainwater
Weathering and Soils Lecture 5

3 Earth’s surface processes
Weathering – Physical breakdown and chemical alteration of rock at Earth’s surface Erosion – The transport of rock fragments

4 Preview of Mechanical Weathering
Source: Tom Bean/DRK Photo

5 Mechanical weathering – breaking of rocks into smaller pieces
Four types of mechanical weathering Frost wedging – freezing and thawing of water in cracks disintegrates rocks Salt wedging is similar

6 Evidence of Frost Wedging in Wheeler Park, Nevada
Source: Tom Bean/DRK Photo

7 Rockfall caused by frost wedging ends up in a stream
Colluvium

8 Salt Weathering is similar, growing salt crystals in cracks
split the rock apart. At the beach and desert playas.

9 Unloading = Mechanical Exfoliation
Granite Batholith above subduction zone Igneous rocks at Earth’s surface peeling like layers off an onion due to reduction in pressure

10 Unloading - Exfoliation of a Pluton

11 Mechanical Exfoliation in Yosemite National Park
Source: Phil Degginger/Earth Scenes

12 3. Thermal expansion and contraction
Alternate expansion and contraction due to heating and cooling - Important in deserts

13 Tree Roots Growing in Rock Fractures Animal Burrows
Biological Activity Tree Roots Growing in Rock Fractures Animal Burrows Source: Runk/Schoenberger/Grant Heilman

14 Mechanical weathering causes increase in surface area
Same volume of rock, but many pieces have much more surface area than one piece

15 Joint-controlled weathering in igneous rocks
Definition: Joints vs Faults Increases surface area for chemical weathering

16 Important for metals concentration
Chemical Weathering Breaks down rock and minerals Important agent in chemical weathering is water (transports ions and molecules involved in chemical reactions) The ions form the cements in Sedimentary Rocks These ions make the ocean salty Important for metals concentration

17 Three types of Chemical Weathering

18 Dissolution of Calcite
By carbonic acid, CO2 in water CO2 + H2O => H2CO3 H2CO3 => H+ + HCO3- Soluble ions contained in underground water CaCO3 +2H+ => H2CO3 + Ca++ H2CO3 => H2O + CO2

19 Dissolution Weathered and Unweathered Limestone Boulders
Source: Ramesh Venkatakrishnan

20 Oxidation Chemical reaction where compound loses electrons
Usually while bonding with oxygen Important in breaking down mafic minerals (contain Fe+2 or +3) Rust- colored mineral (Fe2O3 ) from weathering of Basalt [which contains Olivine (Fe, Mg) SiO4

21 Oxidation of Basaltic Lava Flows
Rust-colored Iron Oxide forms

22 Hydrolysis Water makes H+ and OH- ions
Hydrolysis is the reaction of any substance with water Water’s ions replace different ions in a mineral Feldspars, most abundant crust minerals, become fine clay particles. Clays are light weight, flat plates, easily transported by streams

23 Hydrolysis – Feldspar to Clay
Feldspars become Mechanical fracture due to chemical weathering

24 Hydrolysis Cleopatra’s Needle, (Egypt)
Granite in a Dry Climate Source: New York Public Library, Locan History and Genealogy Division

25 Hydrolysis Cleopatra’s Needle, (Central Park, NYC)
Granite in a Wet Climate Source: Runk/Schoenberger/Grant Heilman

26 Vegetation and Soil Development
Plants use Hydrolysis to get nutrient metals out of minerals

27

28 Bowens Reaction Series and Weathering

29 Soils Also very important in recognizing past climates

30 Soil - combination of mineral and organic matter, water, and air
It is that portion of the regolith (weathered rock and minerals) that supports the growth of plants

31 Components in topsoil that support plant growth

32 Climate also very important, see below
Factors related to bedrock composition (parent material) Weathering-resistant sandstone (mostly quartz) yields little soil Soil Soil Soil Chemical weathering by hydrolysis Iron-rich basalt Chemical weathering by oxidation Feldspar-rich granite Chemical weathering by dissolution Limestone Climate also very important, see below

33 Variations in soil development due to topography: slope and time

34 Equator to Poles Factors
Annual precipitation Temperature Equatorial and tropical rain forests Low-latitude deserts and semi-deserts Temperate regions and mixed boreal forests Arctic and tundra regions Grasslands (steppes) Savannahs 30 degrees Latitude 40ºC Precipitation 1800 mm Temperature 30ºC Evaporation 20ºC 600 mm 10ºC Rainforest US & Europe Bedrock at or very near surface Desert Shallow nutrients Deep Regolith, shallow Soil Soil Deeply weathered bedrock (~ meters deep) Bedrock Increasing depth of weathering Factors related to Climate

35 Soil Profile The soil profile
Soil forming processes operate from the surface downward as water descends Vertical differences are called horizons – zones or layers of soil

36 Soil The soil profile O horizon – organic matter
A horizon – organic and mineral matter High Biological Activity (animals live here) Together the O and A horizons make up topsoil E horizon – little organic matter Zone of leaching – soluble minerals removed B horizon – zone of re-precipitation C horizon – partly altered parent material

37 An idealized soil profile
ONLY ACTIVE EDUCATORS BECOME CHAMPIONS An idealized soil profile

38 Remember the different horizons
A E B C ONLY ACTIVE EDUCATORS BECOME CHAMPIONS Organic Animal Activity Soluble minerals Exited Soluble Minerals Back Crushed Rock

39 Animal Activities in “A” horizon
Worms ingest mineral grains because they are covered with living organisms –their food. Their burrows, not their feeding, increase chemical weathering by exposing the minerals to water and air Source: Runk/Schoenberger/Grant Heilman

40 E and B: Eluviation & Illuviation
exited back

41 Illuviation and Eluviation Leaching and Precipitation of Iron
B Source: Jens/Gutzmer/Rand Afrikaans University/Geology

42 Pedalfer Pedocal Laterite Soil Types Soil types
The characteristics of each soil type primarily depend on the prevailing climatic conditions Three very generic soil types Pedalfer Pedocal Laterite

43 pedalfer pedocal laterite Evergreen forests Shortgrass tropics

44 Pedalfer Accumulation of iron oxides and Al-rich clays in the B horizon. Brown B horizon Best developed under temperate forest landscapes

45 Pedocal White calcium carbonate (caliche) in B horizon
Associated with dry grasslands and brush vegetation

46 Pedocal with Caliche in the B horizon
Organic Activity Leached Accumulation Crushed Rock

47 Laterite Hot and wet tropical climates Monsoonal Climate
Intense chemical weathering Red Iron oxide - Topsoil not distinct from B horizon –bacterium responsible for dissolving soil iron is not present Deep soil but usable nutrients shallow

48 Laterite in Sarawak, Borneo
The percolating rain water causes dissolution of primary rock minerals and decrease of easily soluble elements as sodium, potassium, calcium, magnesium and silicon. This gives rise to a residual concentration of more insoluble elements predominantly iron and aluminum. Source: Fletcher & Baylis/Photo Researchers, Inc.

49 Earth’s surface processes
Erosion – the physical removal of material by mobile agents like water, wind, ice, or gravity

50 Natural rates of soil erosion depend on:
Soil characteristics Climate Slope Type of vegetation Headed for the Sea Source: Ramesh Venkatakrishnan

51 Soil Soil erosion In many regions the rate of soil erosion is significantly greater than the rate of soil formation Farmers level fields to slow loss of topsoil Farmers have been building terraces for thousands of years


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