Weathering Erosion Interactive
Weathering Erosion Interactive
Weathering Erosion Interactive
What is weathering?
Weathering is a set of physical,
chemical and biological processes
that change the physical and
chemical properties of rocks and
soil at or near the earth's surface.
What is weathering
‘Weathering is the response of materials which were
in equilibrium within the lithosphere to conditions at
or near its contact with the atmosphere, the
hydrosphere, and perhaps still more importantly,
the biosphere.’
Reiche, 1950
‘Weathering is the breakdown and alteration of
minerals near the earth’s surface to products that
are more in equilibrium with the newly imposed
conditions.’
Olllier, 1984
More about weathering
• Mechanical (physical]
• Chemical
• Biological
Mechanical weathering breaks rocks down into
smaller pieces.
Types of mechanical weathering include
frost wedging,
exfoliation and
thermal expansion.
Enchanted rock
is a huge
example of
exfoliation
mechanical
weathering
Chemical weathering breaks rocks down
chemically adding or removing chemical
elements, and changes them into other
materials.
Chemical weathering consists of chemical
reactions, most of which involve water.
Precipitation
Evaporation
In chemical weathering, a rock is
broken down by chemical
reactions that change its mineral
composition and physical and
chemical properties
Chemical weathering happens when
the minerals that make up a rock are
changed, leading to the
disintegration of the rock
Chemical weathering happens quickly in
warm, moist environments because
water is needed for the chemical
reactions. The warm weather speeds up
the reactions.
Not all minerals are prone to chemical weathering. For example,
feldspar and quartz, are common minerals in the rock granite, have
very different levels of resistance to chemical weathering.
Quartz doesn’t weather very easily, but feldspar does. Over a long
time, it chemically changes into clay minerals.
Highly weatherable Olivine
Augite
Increasing stability
Hornblende
Biotite
K-feldspar
Muscovite
Highly resistant Quartz
Chemical composition water is
ideally controlled by
• Climate and hydrologic
conditions
• Anthropogenic inputs