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Weathering
By: Katherine Pease
7th Grade Plummer Middle
http://www.geosci.unc.edu/faculty/glazner/Images/Weathering/weathering.html
School
What is Weathering?
Weathering
______________________
______________________
______________________
_____________________.
A wooden post that soaked for many years in a pool of brine in Owens
Lake (dry), eastern California. The grotesque swelling of the wood results
from deposition of salts in the wood.
http://www.geosci.unc.edu/faculty/glazner/Images/Weathering/weathering.html
What are the two main types of
weathering?
_________
Weathering
_________
Weathering
http://www.geography4kids.com/files/land_weathering.html
Mechanical Weathering,
what is that?
It
is the process of
_________________________
_________________________
_________________________
________________
What causes this mechanical
weathering to happen?
Abrasion
Plants
Animals
Wedging
Water
Wind
Ice
What is Abrasion?
Abrasion
refers to the
___________________
___________________
___________________
___________________
__________________
How do plants and animals cause
mechanical weathering?
Roots
and plants
________________________
_____. They act like ______
and push the rocks apart.
Little animals also help by
________ and ________
through the ground.
http://www.geography4kids.com/files/land_weathering.html
How does wind cause mechanical
weathering?
Some
rocks that are
composed of soft minerals or
are composed of particles that
are not well cemented may
__________________ when
struck by ______________ or
________________________
__.
What is Frost Wedging?
FROST
WEDGING. There
are already some small
cracks in boulders,
______gets in the cracks,
when that water ______
the rock is _______instead
of __________________.
 The
pictures in this article are from the
summit ridge of Ypsilon Mountain,
perhaps one of the best spots in the park
to see the effects of frost wedging. You
can clearly see in these pictures how the
rocks were split apart into plates -- a
sure sign of frost wedging at work.
SALT
What is Salt Wedging?
WEDGING. When it ____
and __________________, it
usually have ions and salts
dissolved inside.
The _____________________ and
______________. Slowly
_____________________, those
crystals act like a _________ and
_______________________
A wooden post that soaked for many
years in a pool of brine in Owens Lake
(dry), eastern California. The grotesque
swelling of the wood results from
deposition of salts in the wood.
Ok, but what is Chemical
Weathering then?
___________
___________
___________
___________
___________
___________
______
http://www.geography4kids.com/files/land_weathering.html
But how does this chemical
weathering make the changes?
Through
the
process of…
__________________
___________
________________
What do you mean by
oxidation?
The
process by which
_________________________________
_________________________________
________________________________
When iron reacts with oxygen,
reddish -brown iron oxide is
formed. The iron-oxide crust
crumbles easily and weakens
the rock.
Oxidation Continued
______________________
______________________
Then what is hydrolysis?

HYDROLYSIS is…
 _____________________________
_____________________________
_____________________________
_____________________________
 For example, during hydrolysis, the
feldspar in granite changes to clay
mineral which crumbles easily,
weakening the rock and causing it to
break down.
What is carbonization?
____________________________
____________________________
____________________________
____________________________
This process weakens the rock
thus
____________________________
____________________________
____________________________
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