The Solid Earth - Chapter 2: Weathering Flashcards

1
Q

Disintegration and decomposition of rock or near the surface of the earth

A

Weathering

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2
Q

transfer of rock material downslope under the influence of gravity

A

Mass wasting

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3
Q

incorporation and transportation of material by a mobile agent, usually water, wind, or ice

A

erosion

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4
Q

As _____ breaks rock apart, it facilitates the movement of rock debris by erosion and mass wasting

A

Weathering

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5
Q

True or false: the natural processes that break apart a concrete sidewalk are different in nature from those that disintegrate rock

A

False

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6
Q

After millions of years of ___ and erosion, the rocks overlying a large intrusive igneous body may be removed, exposing it at the surface

A

uplift

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7
Q

Rocks will change gradually until they are once again in equilibrium with their new ____

A

environment

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8
Q

Mechanical and chemical weathering (do/do not) often work together

A

Do

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9
Q

When a rock undergoes this type of weathering it is broken into smaller and smaller pieces, each retaining the characteristics of the original material

A

mechanical

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10
Q

By breaking rocks into small pieces, mechanical weathering (increases/decreases) the amount of surface area available for chemical weathering

A

increases

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11
Q

What are the four important physical processes that lead to the fragmentation of rock?

A

Expulsion from unloading
Frost wedging
Organic activity
Thermal expansion

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12
Q

One of the most important processes of mechanical weathering is alternate freezing and ___

A

thawing

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13
Q

Water expands about ___ percent when it expands

A

9

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14
Q

The increase in volume in frozen water occurs because the molecules arrange themselves into a (straight line/open crystalline structure)

A

open crystalline structure

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15
Q

True or false: when water freezes it can exert a tremendous outward force

A

true

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16
Q

What is it called when rocks break into pieces after many freeze-thaw cycles?

A

frost wedging

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17
Q

Where is frost wedging most pronounced:? (Hint: this area goes through a daily freeze-thaw cycle)

A

mountainous regions

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18
Q

Large piles formed from sections of rocks that are wedged loose after frost wedging

A

talus slopes

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19
Q

When large masses of igneous rock are exposed by erosion, concentric slabs begin to (break loose/cool)

A

break loose

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20
Q

The process that produces the onion like layers that strip away in slabs in unloading

A

sheeting

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21
Q

In unloading, sheets begin to strip away because the pressure has (decreased/increased)

A

decreased

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22
Q

Fractures from unloading tend to develop (parallel/perpendicular) to the surface topography and give the exhumed igneous body a domed shape

A

parallel

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23
Q

Continued weathering eventually causes the slabs produced by sheeting to separate and spall off these large structures known as ______ domes

A

exfoliation

24
Q

True or false: large rock slabs have been known to explode off the walls of newly cut mine shafts because of the reduced pressure

A

true

25
Q

Fractures produced by contraction during the crystallization of magma and tectonic forces are known as ___

A

joints

26
Q

Joints are important rock structures that allow ____ to penetrate to depth and start the process of weathering before the rock is exposed at the surface

A

water

27
Q

The daily cycle of temperature change is thought to (weaken/strengthen) rocks

A

weaken

28
Q

Which is true?
A. Heating a rock causes it to contract, and freezing a rock causes it to expand
B. Heating a rock causes it to expand, and freezing a rock causes it to contract

A

B

29
Q

Which part of the shell is withstanding stress as the rocks expand and contract?

A

Shell

30
Q

Scientists have debated the veracity of the thermal expansion explanation, and the plausible response they concluded is that rocks must be weakened by ____ _____ before they are broken down by thermal activity

A

chemical weathering

31
Q

Plant roots in search of _____ and _____ grow into fractures, and as the roots grow they wedge the rock apart

A

Minerals

Water

32
Q

This group of organisms further break down rock by moving fresh material to the surface where physical and chemical processes can more effectively attack it

A

burrowing animals

33
Q

Decaying organisms produce ____ which contribute to chemical weathering

A

acid

34
Q

This type of weathering involves the complex processes that alter the internal structures of minerals by removing or adding elements

A

chemical

35
Q

___ is by far the most important agent of chemical weathering

A

water

36
Q

Oxygen dissolved in water will ____ some materials

A

oxidize

37
Q

When rocks containing iron-rich minerals _____, a yellow to reddish brown rust will appear on the surface

A

oxidize

38
Q

Carbon dioxide (CO2) dissolved in water (H2O) forms ____ ____ (_____)

A

carbonic acid (H2CO3)

39
Q

Rain dissolves some carbon dioxide as it falls through the ______, and additional amounts released by decaying organic matter are acquired as the water percolates through the soil

A

atmosphere

40
Q

What very reactive hydrogen ion does Carbonic acid ionize to form?

A

H+

41
Q

What is the very reactive bicarbonate ion formed when carbonic acid ionizes?

A

(HCO3-)

42
Q

Because ____ ____ are the end product of weathering, they are very stable under surface conditions

A

clay materials

43
Q

Clay materials make up a (high/low) percentage of the inorganic material in soil.

A

high

44
Q

The abundant sedimentary rock ___ contains a high level of clay materials

A

shale

45
Q

In the formation of clay minerals, some ____ is removed from the feldspar structure and carried away by groundwater

A

silica

46
Q

Dissolved silica will eventually ____ to produce nodules of chert or flint, fill in the pore spaces between sediment grains, or be carried to the ocean, where microscopic animals will remove it to build hard shells

A

precipitate

47
Q

The weathering of potassium feldspar generates a residual clay mineral, a soluble salt (potassium bicarbonate) and some _____ which enters into solution

A

silica

48
Q

Quartz is very resistant to ____ weathering

A

chemical

49
Q

Name the four ions silicate minerals yield when chemically weathered

A

Calcium
Potassium
Magnesium
Sodium

50
Q

When angular rock masses are attacked by water that enters along joints, the rocks tend to take on a ____ shape

A

spherical

51
Q

The process in which edges of rocks become more rounded

A

Spheroidal weathering

52
Q

The addition of what increases size in spherical scaling?

A

water

53
Q

The ____ weather in essentially the same order as their order of crystallization

A

Silicates

54
Q

The optimum environment for chemical weathering is a combination of ___ temperatures and abundant ____

A

warm

moisture

55
Q

This phrase means that rocks exposed do not weather at the same rate

A

Differential weathering