Geology Test #3
The important characteristics of surface conditions that lead to chemical weathering
the presence of water (in the air and on the ground surface), the abundance of oxygen, and the presence of carbon dioxide, which produces weak carbonic acid when combined with water.
Evaporites
the product of saltwater evaporation. Can only occur when lake has no outlet so as evaporation increases, dissolved ions become more concentrated Gypsum (CaSO4) and /or Halite (NaCl)
The colder the climate...
the slower the process
Lithification
the transformation of loose sediment into solid rock
In the presence of oxygen, the dissolved iron is
then quickly converted to hematite
The amount of CO2 in the air is enough to make only very weak carbonic acid, but
there is typically much more CO2 in the soil, so water that percolates through the soil can become significantly more acidic.
quartz
virtually unaffected by chemical weathering
degree of chemical weathering is greatest in
warm and wet climates
H2O + CO
—->H2CO3
Chemical sedimentary rocks types
1) Evaporites 2) Dolostones 3) Chert (chemical chert) 4) Travertine (chemical Limestone)
karst topography Is characterized by
1) Sinkholes: surface depressions formed by the collapse of caves or other underground void spaces 2) Springs: places where water flows naturally from the ground (from spaces in the bedrock). 3) Disappearing streams: streams that terminate abruptly by seeping into the ground.
Weathering
General process by which rocks are broken down at Earth's surface
H2O + CO —->H2CO3 water + carbon dioxide —-> carbonic acid THEN...
H2CO3 —-> H+ + HCO3-, carbonic acid —-> hydrogen ion + bicarbonate ion
Oxidation
Oxidation reactions in rocks transform iron-bearing minerals into a rusty-brown mixtures of various iron-oxide and iron-hydroxide minerals, such as hematite (Fe2O3), goethite (α-FeO(OH), and limonite (FeO(OH)·nH2O
Hydrolysis
Potassium feldspar, a common mineral in granite, reacts with acidic water (carbonic acid) to produce kaolinite (a type of clay) and other dissolved ions Hydrolysis reactions break down not only feldspars, but many other silicate minerals as well, amphiboles, pyroxenes, micas, and olivines.
Monument Valley, Arizona.
Red and brown iron oxides color weathering rocks in
Tower Karst Landscape in the Guilin region of China:
Ridges or walls between adjacent sinkholes tend to be steep-sided, for they were originally joint controlled. Over time, the walls erode, leaving only jagged, isolated spires3⁄4 a karst landscape dominated by such spires is called tower karst.
Angularity of particle types
Rounded--Subrounded--Subangular--angular
Sediments include
Sand, Mud, gravel, dust, calcified organisms, saline precipitates
dissolution
Some minerals dissolve completely, and their components go into solution. For example, calcite (CaCO3) is soluble in acidic solutions
Sedimentary Transport Agents
Waves, Lake currents, River currents, Wind, Ice, Meltwater, ocean currents, Turbidity currents, Tidal currents, Tides
Greek ruins at Segesta, Italy
Weathered limestone blocks and columns of 2500-year-old
Bicarbonate ions react with feldspar
Weathering it to kaolinite clay and silicateand releasing bicarbonate and potassium ions.
Karst Topography - China
World Heritage listed. It covers half a million square kilometers (193,000 square miles) of southern and central China. China's limestone landscapes are uniquely big and unusually interesting
Sinkholes
a small, steep depression in the land surface above the cavernous limestone formation
Ferriciron Fe(III) combines with water to precipitate
a solid,iron oxide, from solution
Carbonic acid ionizes to form
hydrogen ions (H+) and bicarbonate ions (HCO3-)
Agate
is chert that grows in concentric rings inside hollows in a rock and ends up with a striped appearance, caused by variations in the content of impurities while ppt. took place
Petrified wood
is chert that's made when ash from a volcanic eruption buries a forest. The ash contains silica, which dissolves in groundwater that passes into trees. Dissolved silica precipitates as cryptocrystalline quartz within wood, gradually replacing the wood's cellulose. The chert retains the shape of the wood and even its growth rings.
Dissolution of limestone
is enhanced by the atmospheric CO2 contained in rainwater. Waters that infiltrate soils may pick up even more of the gas from the CO2 given off by plant roots, bacteria, and other soil-dwelling organisms
Chemical sedimentary rocks
made up of minerals that precipitate from water solutions
Biochemical
made up of the shells of organisms
This cover ranges from
nonexistent (bare basement rocks) to almost 20 km thick beneath continental shelves. While sediments and sedimentary rocks cover more than 80% of the Earth's surface, they constitute less than 1% of the Earth's mass
1- natural zones of weakness
(Joints, fractures....etc.
Physical (mechanical)weathering
1- Natural zones of weakness (Joints, fractures....etc. 2- Exfoliation and spheroidal weathering 3- Root wedging 4- Frost wedging 5- Salt wedging 6- Differential thermal expansion of minerals creates stress in rocks e.g. Deserts 7-Other forces: rivers, glaciers, waves, burrowing creatures (from earthworms to gophers, and HUMANS (in the past century, perhaps the most energetic agents of physical weathering on the planet.
Why weathering is important
1- all the clays of the world2- all the soils of the world3- the dissolved substances that are carried by rivers to the ocean.
Three factors come into play when classifying clastic sedimentary Rocks
1- grain size 2- grain shape 3- Composition (mineral content)
Chemical effects of chemical weathering on silicates
1- it leaches, dissolves away, cations and silica 2-it hydrates, or adds water to, the minerals 3- makes the solutions less acidic
Factors that control the weathering of rocks are
1-The properties of the parent rock 2-The climate 3-The presence or absence of soil 4-The length of exposure
karst topography is Most strongly advanced in regions with:
1-high-rainfall climate, with abundant vegetation 2-extensively jointed limestone formations 3-appreciable hydraulic gradient.
glacier physical weathering
A glacier is nothing more than a frozen river still moving. It might only move an inch or two per year, but it still moves and this ice will erode the ground and rock below it faster and more aggressively than if it was just water. Its because glaciers also pick up and move the rocks that they run over and this gravel (chunks of rocks) can carve mountains down and cut valleys miles deep.
Medium Particle rocks
Arkose (sand sized quartz plus feldspar grains) Sandstone (almost pure quartz sand)
Travertine (chemical Limestone)
Around some hot springs, places where hot- water solutions spill out of the Earth, terraces of chemical limestone accumulate. Such buildups develop because when the hot water reaches the ground surface, it cools and degasses (meaning that dissolved carbonic acid bubbles off as CO2 gas, and thus can dissolve less calcite; as a result, the calcite precipitates to form rock. also makes stalecites + stalagmites
Coarse Particle rocks
Breccia + Conglomerate
Carbonic acid (H2CO3) forms when
CO2 and H2O molecules combine in rainwater.
Breakdown of calcite by carbonic acid into two water-soluble ions
Calcite + carbonic acid = Calcium ion + bicarbonate ion CaCO3 + H2CO3 = Ca2+ + 2HCO3
positive feedback
Chemical and physical weathering help and reinforce each other The faster the chemical decay (chemical weathering), the weaker thepieces and the more susceptible to breakage into smaller pieces (physical weathering). The smaller the pieces, the greater the surface area available for chemical weathering.
Karst Topography
Dissolution of limestones—or, rarely, other soluble rocks such as evaporites —by groundwater. As this CO2-rich water moves down to the water table, through the unsaturated zone to the saturated zone, it creates openings as it dissolves carbonate minerals.
half dome is what time of weathering
Exfoliation
his reaction shows potassium feldspar
Feldspar + Carbonic acid + water --> dissolved silica + dissolved potassium + dissolved bicarbonate ion
Types of chemical chert
Flint (Black chert) tools and arrowheads Jasper (Red chert) jewelry Petrified wood Agate
Chemical weathering produced by organisms
For example, roots of plants, fungi, and lichens, secret organic acids that help dissolve minerals in rocks; these organisms extract nutrients from the minerals. Microbes, such as bacteria, eat minerals for lunch
A Surface Veneer
Formed by surface processes. Sediments and sedimentary rocks are characterized by bedding
Chert (Chemical)
Formed when cryptocrystalline quartz (crypto is Greek for "hidden", quartzGrains that are too small to be seen without the extreme magnification of an electron microscope) gradually replace calcite crystals within a body of limestone.
Finer than .0039 Particle rocks
Mudstone (blocky fracture) Claystone (blocky fracture) Shale (breaks along bedding)
Sorting
the more homogeneous, the more sorted -very well sorted has more oil and gas because more space between them
biochemical Limestone
Some organisms construct their shells out of calcium (Ca)2+ and carbonate (CO3)2- ions, which they merge to make the mineral calcite (CaCO3) or its polymorph, aragonite. When the organisms die, the solid material in their shells turns into sediment that eventually becomes biochemical sedimentary rocks. Thus, biochemical sedimentary rocks consist of shells and shell debris.
examples of evaporite sites
The Bonneville Salt Flats, near the Great Salt Lake of central Utah Great Salt Lake has no outlet
Hydration
The absorption of water into the crystal structure of minerals, causes some minerals, such as certain types of clay, to expand.
Arecibo radio telescope in Puerto Rico
The dish was built by smoothing the surface of a 300-m- wide sinkhole in a karst terrain.
river physical weathering
The energy of the river directly affects what is being moved = Rivers in flood stage have greater energy, can move larger pieces with greater force. Therefore the potential for mechanical weathering is greater= Moving sand and silt acts like sandpaper on the larger rocks in the river bed and on each other.= Rocks hitting other rocks can break, making smaller pieces which can then become part of the suspended load.
Bedding:
The formation of parallel layersby the settling of particlesto the bottom of the sea, a river, or a land surface
Frost wedging
The mechanical breakup of rock caused by the expansion of freezing water in cracks and crevices water expands by 9% when it freezes
Acid Rock Drainage (ARD)
acidic water produced by the oxidation of pyrite and other minerals
Dolostone
an abundant carbonate rock composed primarily of dolomite and formed by the diagenesis of carbonate sediments and limestones Most dolomite forms by a chemical reaction between Limestone (solid calcite (CaCO3) and magnesium-bearing groundwater
Talus
an apron-shaped pile of fragmental rock, has accumulated at the base of these cliffs near Mt. Snowdon, Wales
Stalagmite
an inverted icicle-like deposit on the floor below the stalactite
Dissolved ions - weathering
are carried to the sea in streams or transported underground in groundwater. Eventually, the ions precipitate as new minerals in the sea or as new minerals filling open spaces between grains underground.
compaction (lithification)
as grains are squeezed together by the weight of overlying sediment into a mass denser than the original
cementation (lithification)
as minerals precipitate around deposited particles and bind them together.
Carbonic acid also reacts with calcitein limestone to produce
bicarbonate and calcium ions.
The dissolution of limestone breaks down
calcite by carbonic acid into two water-soluble ions Calcium ion + bicarbonate ion
Chemical weathering results from
chemical changes to minerals that become unstable when they are exposed to surface conditions
Organic sedimentary rocks
consist of carbon-rich relicts of plants
Clastic, or detrital, sedimentary rocks
consists of cemented-together detritus (solid fragments and grains) derived from preexisting rocks. "clastic", from the Greek Klastos, meaning "broken"
Sediment
consists of loose (Unconsolidated) 1) Rock fragments and or grains of minerals broken down from once-intact rock 2) Mineral crystals that precipitate directly out of water 3) Shells (forms when organisms extract ions out of water.
Sedimentary rocks represent a uniquely important rock type, for they
contain the bulk of our energy resources (e.g. Coal, Petroleum, and natural gas) and our groundwater.
Where do sedimentary rocks exist
cover much of Earth's land surface and sea floor, they form only a thin layer atop the igneous and metamorphic rocks that make up the main volume of the crust
feldspar
easily altered
The thicker the soil the
faster the process
The more organic activity the
faster the process, because of nutrients that break down into acids
Ferrous Iron Fe(II) is oxidized by oxygen molecules to form
ferric iron
Sedimentary rock
formed at or near the surface of the Earth by :1) Cementing together of loose rocks fragments or grains of minerals, 2) Cementing together of shell fragments 3) Precipitation of minerals from water solutions
Solid materials - weathering
gets picked up and moved to a new location by wind, water, or ice, until they eventually settle out. Then they either become incorporated in soil, or become buried deeply.
A special type of oxidation takes place in areas where the rocks
have elevated levels of sulfide minerals, especially pyrite (FeS2).
what made surface of mars red
oxidation
2-Exfoliation and spheroidal weathering
peeling like an onion or layers of rock
salt wedging
rock disintegration caused by the crystallization of salts from evaporating water
Limestone is a
sedimentary rock, Composed mostly of the mineral calcite (CaCO3).
Root wedging
self explanatory, roots make their way into rocks and grow bigger
Erosion
set of processes that loosen and move soil and rock downhill or downwind.
Iron pyroxene dissolves to release
silica and ferrous iron to solution
Fine particle rocks
siltstone (fine sand)
The lower the rainfall the...
slower the erosion process
Pyrite reacts with water and oxygen to form
sulfuric acid
Stalactite
suspended from the ceiling
Physical (mechanical) weathering
takes place when solid rock becomes fragmented by physical processes that do not change its chemical composition
Chemical weathering
takes place when the minerals in a rock are chemically altered or dissolved
Dissolution of limestone is enhanced by
the atmospheric CO2 contained in rainwater (carbonic acid)
The smaller the pieces
the greater the surface area available for chemical weathering