Weathering
define solubility
- amount of mineral dissolved in saturated solution - point at which mineral will not dissolve anymore
What's the functions of solids? - regulate.. - serve as medium for .. - filter, store and supply... - support recycling of ... ...
- composition of the atmosphere - serve as medium for plant growth - filter store and supply water - support recycling of organic matter
what happens to the ferrous ion ? example ?
- electrons are transferred from Fe 2+ to O2 - producing Fe 3+ which combines with water to form iron oxide and iron hydroxide minerals - hematite, ferrihydrite (hematite is not a silicate tehse are products)
hot and humid
- formulation of insoluble residues with crusts of iron oxide and aluminum oxide
weathering mechanisms - physical and ____ weathering causes the rock to ____ and _____ - chemical weathering attacks ____ _____ and weakens rocks - as a square progressives into a cube what part is attacked at the most sites
- fracture and fragment - exposed surfaces and weakens rocks - the corner is attacked by three sides
describe the uplift weathering hypothesis
- global rate of CHEMICAL weathering is dependent on the availability of fresh rock - mountain chains at convergent boundaries enhance weathering - as new silicate rich crust is exposed to weathering, atmospheric CO2 is consumed and the climate cools
weathering rates vary among rock types and are determined by four factors:
- properties of the parent rock, harder rocks weather slower - climate (hot climate promotes more weathering) - presence of absence of soil (soil protects) - length of exposure
describe how pyroxene would under go oxidation?
- pyroxene dissolves releasing silica and ferrous iron to solution - ferrous iron is oxidized, forming FERRIC iron which than combines with water and precipitates as a solid into an iron oxide such as hematite
how do soils influence weathering
- retain water required for weathering - soil water often exhibits HIGHER co2 content than rainwater, therefore making it more acidic than rainwater
mining and mineral processing produces large volumes of mine wastes - waste rock is removed because _________ - tailings are produced by ?
- waste rock is removed because it contains small amount of economic materials - tailings (by products) are produced by separation of economic from non economic (gangue) minerals
describe ice wedging - important in ____ climates and ____ regions
- water enters cracks in rock and expands during freezing - outward force can wedge open cracks and split rocks - ice is less dense than water - freezing causes expansion - temperate climates and mountainous regions
describe exofoliation - example
- when rocks form underground and they reach the surface the low pressure causes them to expand and crack (pressure release during exhumation), could also be due to expansion and contraction during temperature change -along with cracking there is detached large flat or curved sheets of rock - contribution to jointing of granitic rock adjacent to the coquihalla highway near Hope BC
describe weathering in hot and arid environments
-salts accumulate at the surface to evaporation - frost, abrasion, and slaking break the rock into sand or gravel - wind blows smaller particles away
which minerals in granite are most susceptible to weathering?
1. feldspar, biotite, magnetite, quartz present ' 2. cracks form along crystal boundaries, everything starts to decay except for quartz (clays form) 3. as the decay progresses and as cracks open, the rock weakens and disintegrates
what affect does weathering have on C02 in the atmosphere?
It decreases the amount of CO2 in the atm
whats the major portion of soils ? 45%
MINERALS
is pH of rainwater the same everywhere on earth? what is it?
actually only 5 and no
chemical weathering - reactions of minerals with _____ and ______ - may promote mineral _____ and/or formation of ___ _____
air and water dissolution and or formation of new minerals
define dissolution rate
amount of mineral that dissolves in an unsaturated solution in a given time - less stable minerals tend to dissolve more quickly - composition and bonding influence dissolution
what happens when quartz is hydrolyzed?
basically just produces smaller quartz - sedimentary quartz
_____ produced during chemical weathering is transported and stored _______
bicarbonate, oceans also forms carbonate minerals (calcite)
soil formation influenced by:
biological processes nature of parent rock climate topography time
what is hydrolysis?
chemical reaction between mineral and acidic water - acid rain (carbonic acid)
what accounts for observed differences in mineral weathering rates ?
chemical stability
three sizes of fragments rank them smallest to largest, what does the size of fragements determine ?
clay sized > silt sized > sand sized size of fragments determines the texture
last group of silicates to break down during weathering ?
clays - kaolinite quartz ?
all rocks exposed to ___ ___ undergo weathering
climate system
Soils form the interface between ____ and the ____ ___ ___
climate system and plate tectonic system
carbon dioxide from the atmosphere is ______ during chemical weathering
consumed
dark soil is rich in: light soil is rich in:
dark - organic matter light - lacks organic matter
describe how karst topography comes about?
dissolution by carbonic acid dissolves the mineral calcite, which is the main constituent of limestone widespread dissolution of carbonate rock leads to the development of karst topography
Dissolution of calcite does what ?
dissolved CaCO3 and the product is calcite travertine
give an example of a economic and non economic sulfide minerals
ec - chalcopyrite, or galena )with Pb non-ec - pyrite
negative regions of water molecule attracts cations and this ?
enhances chemical weathering
soil erosion - significant ___ ___
environmental issue
soil erosion versus soil formation
erosion - losses amount to trillions of tons per year - 0.04 cm / year human activities accelerate the loss of soil formation - is almost always slower than soil erosion important factors: climate and time nature of the source rock
what dissolves faster, feldspar or quartz?
feldspar dissolves much quicker because there is some ionic bonding (2 cleavage planes at 90 degrees) quartz - only covalent bonding, no cleavage planes
the role of water: _____ is one of the many silicate minerals that are altered to form _____ minerals why do we care? (2)
feldspars one of several minerals that are altered to form clay minerals 1. feldspar is abundant in earths crust 2. it is a common weathering process common to other minerals
the role of oxygen - oxygen facilitates oxidative wreathing of minerals containing ____ ____ examples
ferrous iron Fe2+ iron rich silicates - pyroxene and olivine sulfide minerals - pyrite
define physical weathering
fragmentation of rock without chemical change
you can describe soils as ______ with ____, ___ and __
geosystem with inputs, outputs, and processes
in water: halites solubility? quartz solubility?
halites - higher sol quartz - lower sol
Oxidation of olivine does what ?
hematite is produced and it gives off H2CO3
minerals with _____ solubility are less stable and thus ____ susceptible to weathering
higher solubility, less stable, more susceptible to weathering
chemical weathering processes include : (3)
hydrolysis oxidation dissolution
how does weathering produce sedimentary rock ?
igneous, metamorphic, or sedimentary rock under go weathering to produce sediment which is subsequently transported, deposited, and undergoes lithification
in what conditions would you get little weathering
in arid climates
what happens when we dissolve carbon dioxide in water? decreasing or increasing pH accelerates weathering ?
it produces carbonic acid - weak acid therefore lowering pH and increasing the rate of weathering
mass wasting erosion
landslides - debris flows - mudflows
hydrolysis feldspar weathering illustrates three main effects of chemical weathering on silicates
leeching - cations and silica are dissolved away hydration - water is added to minerals neutralization - solutions are made less acidic (carbonic acid)
tailings vs waste rock ..
like waste rock tailings have no economic value, large volumes, high surface area BUT they have high sulfide-mineral content the difference is that waste rock never had the potential to be of any economic value whereas tailings are the result of the valuable component being separated away from the silica and this is what is left over
cold environment
mechanical breakdown (ice wedging) is the major weathering processes
waste rock - ____ - economic - ____ volumes - high _____ _____ - ____ - ____ sulfide mineral content
non-eco high high SA low to moderate sulfide mineral content
list the stability of minerals from olivine > quartz
olivine > pyroxene > ca-plagioclase feldspar > biotite > orthoclase feldspar (K) > quartz
____ and other sulfide minerals are unstable in the presence of ____ and ____
oxygen and water
mine waste weathering - sulfide minerals weather in the presence of _______ and ________ -generate _____ - release ____ and metals
oxygen and water generate acid and release sulfate and metals
what three things influence solubility ?
pH, temp, pressure
finer vs ped soils which resist erosion which may become loess
ped - resist erosion loess - may become loess ( formed by dust blown fine particles )
structure: tendency to form ____
peds
where does physical weathering dominate? where does chemical weathering dominate?
physical - regions of low temperature, dry climate (low rainfall) chemical - regions of high temp and high rainfall
abrasion by glaciers - ______ weathering due to ____ between ____ and particles transported by the glacier - material is removed from rocks by particles in the glacier - generates __________ __________
physical weathering due to friction between rock and particles transported by glaciers - generates new particles
weathering is the result of ______, _______ and _____ processes
physical, biological and chemical processes
physical weathering - due to _____ release, ab_______, freeze-____, ______ action, growth of _______ crystals, or other physical means - aided by ______, rock ________ and other types of fractures
pressure release, abrasion, freeze-thaw, hydraulic action (ex.waves), growth of salt crystals, or other physical means aided by bedding, rock joints, and other types of fractures
what happens when orthoclase feldspar undergoes hydrolysis
produces (dissolved) K+. and silicate SiO2 and turns it into kaolinite clay
products of weathering leads to ?
production of soils
weathering modifies ____ and the _______ within them
rock and the minerals within them
define ventifact
rocks that have been abraded, pitched, etched, grooved by wind driven particles
growth of salt crystals - ____ water seeps into ______ rock and then _______, causing interstitial growth of _____ _____ which pry the rock ______ or ______ apart
saline water seeps into the permeable rock and then evaporates causing interstitial growth of salt crystals which pry the rock grains or crystals apart
weathering produces _______ which is subsequently _____ by ______ and transported elsewhere
sediment, removed by erosion and transported elsewhere
what is the most specific Canadian soil classification, least?
series is most specific - pedon features order - dominant soil forming process is least specific (order, great group-strength of soil forming process, subgroup-kind and arrangement of horizons, family-parent material characteristics , series)
outputs :
soil profiles with distinct layering and structure - leaching, wind, water erosion
Where is clay abundant?
soils and sediments
______ ore deposits are a main source of metals
sulfide
what kind of slope might ice wedging produce?
talus slope
define chemical stability and what it is determined by ?
tendency for a mineral to retain its composition during weathering - solubility - dissolution rate
How exactly does carbonic acid hydrolyze feldspar?
the carbonic acid splits into hydrogen atom and carbonate and the carbonate react with the feldspar weathering it to clay! it than releases bicarbonate ions and potassium ions keep in mind that this is both the work of CO2 and H20 which combine to form carbonic acid
are framework silicates more or less susceptible to weathering than olivine for example ?
they are less
what mineral are microbes likely to oxidize?
they are likely to oxidize pyrite (FeS2)
true or false: oxygen and carbon dioxide do not have a substantial influence on weathering reactions
this is false. they do
describe the processes of soil - transformations: - translocation: factors influencing soil information:
transformations: physical and or chemical changes over time translocations: horizontal and lateral movements of material factors: biological processes: plants, animals, microbes, humans nature of parent rock climate: percip and temp topography: slope and aspect (which direction a slope faces) time: duration of interaction of these factors
True or false: concentration of CO2 in the atm is relatively small
true
sulfide ore deposits contain both economic and non economic minerals, true or false?
true
true or false: any rock exposed at earths surface can undergo weathering?
true
true or false: stability is dependent on environmental conditions
true
true or false: variations in atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations impact weathering rates?
true
true or false: weathering enables growth of new minerals through crystallization
true
describe fluvial erosion Fluvial processes include the motion of sediment and erosion or deposition on the river bed. Erosion by moving water can happen in two ways. Firstly, the movement of water across the bed exerts a shear stress directly onto the bed.
water - suspension: perpetual state of movement in water without touching floor - bed load: skipping and hopping temp. water column - saltation : particle bounce into water column
rocks tend to fracture along natural zones of _______ examples?
weakness - bedding planes in shale - foliation plates in slate - jointing in basalt
what three things are inputs for soil
weathered rock , organisms, dust
what are soils comprised of ?
weathering products, organic matter, water and gases - large diversity of micro and macro organisms
eolian erosion
wind
what is the difference between open pit and underground, is mining considered weathering?
yeah it is I think.
does weathering contribute to soil production?
yes