02 Weathering
02 Weathering
Weathering
Oscar Alvarez
Department of Physics and Geoscienes
Universidad del Norte
Weathering
Disintegration or breakdown of rocks (no transport, that is erosion).
Alteration of rocks and minerals by processes acting at or near Earth's surface.
It causes: changes in strength, permeability, or particle size
Types of weathering
Physical weathering: mechanical breakdown of rocks; changes size
Biological weathering: effects of organisms; can act like either chemical or physical
weathering
Weathering
Temperature and precipitation control both
the magnitude and relative importance of
physical and chemical weathering processes.
Chemical weathering
• Most effective in areas of warm, moist climates –
decaying vegetation creates acids that enhance
weathering.
• Least effective in polar regions (water is locked up
as ice) and arid regions (little water)
Mechanical weathering
• Enhanced where there are frequent freeze-thaw
cycles Tropical regions are generally dominated
by chemical weathering and high latitudes
by physical weathering.
Mechanical weathering
Disintegration or disagragation into smaller pieces
Cracks form where stresses imparted by expansion, contraction, or shearing exceed the
strength of rocks or minerals.
Mechanical weathering
Disintegration or disagragation into smaller pieces
Ca2+, Mg2+, Na+ > K+ > Si4+ > Fe3+ > Al3+
The most mobile cations are readily stripped from mineral surfaces, tend
to remain in solution, and are the first to be lost from rocks as they
weather.
The least mobile cations are relatively insoluble and become
concentrated in residual soils.
Oxidation
Oxidation = loss of electron
Reduction = gain of electron
2. Contact Time: longer contact = more removal, but rate decreases as water
saturates. Expect groundwater to have higher concentrations of dissolved
species.
Biological activity also increases the potential for chemical weathering by increasing surface
area and creating and enlarging pathways for subsurface water flow.
Lichens and mosses grow on rocks
Roots wedge into pores and
crevices. When the roots
grow, the rock splits.