Physical geography chapter 13 review
frost wedging
this process produces a powerful mechanical force that can overcome the tensional strength of a rock through expansion
rockfall
volume of rock that falls through the air and hits a surface
flow
when soil is saturated, _______ will occur
9%
when water freezes, its volume expands as much as _____ %
silicate
hydrolysis breaks down _______________ minerals in rocks
hydration
hydrolysis is in contrast with?
hydration
involves little chemical change but does involve a change in structure water becomes part of the chemical composition of the mineral, forming a hydrate "combination with water"
surface area
joints increase the _____________ _________ of rock exposed to both physical and chemical weathering
chemical weathering
karst topography is due to _____________ ________________
small
landscapes in a dynamic equilibrium show ___________ variations over time
mass wastin
mass movement is also known as....
rusting
most familiar oxidation process is _____________ of iron in a rock or soil
topography
the arrangement of the natural and artificial physical features of an area
regolith
the broken-up rock due to weathering
hydrolysis
the decomposition of a chemical compound by reaction with water
Dynamic equilibrium model
the idea of landscape formation as a balancing act between tectonic uplift and reduction by weathering and erosion
bedrock
the parent rock from which weathered regolith and soils develop
increases
the presence of joints _____________ both physical and chemical weathering
mass wasting
the process involved in mass movement and erosion of the landscape
chemical weathering process
the process of actual decomposition and decay of the constituent minerals in rock due to chemical reaction
physical weathering process
the process of rock breakage without any chemical alteration
weathering
the process that breaks up rocks by disintegrating them into mineral particles or dissolving them into water
exfoliation
the removal or shedding of an outer layer by a pressure release from the removal of an overlying rock
C
4) Which of the following is not a class of mass movement? A) fall B) slide C) slip D) flow E) creep
B
Exfoliation and pressure-release jointing are examples of ________ weathering processes. A) chemical B) physical C) biological D) both biological and physical
D
Factors influencing the weathering process include A) the climate of an area. B) rock composition and structure. C) the amount of vegetation in an area. D) rock composition and structure, climate, and vegetation. E) only the climate of an area and rock composition.
B
Inclined surfaces that form the boundaries of landforms are known as A) catchment. B) slopes. C) free face. D) regolith.
A
Karst topography is formed primarily by A) carbonation and solution. B) mass wasting processes. C) oxidation and hydrolysis. D) exfoliation and hydration.
A
The dynamic equilibrium model refers to A) a balancing act between tectonic uplift and rates of denudation by weathering and erosion in a given landscape. B) a theory involving the cyclic or evolutionary development of a landscape. C) a sequential development of landforms. D) an important concept first stated by William Morris Davis.
D
The process that breaks down rock at the Earth's surface through disintegration of rocks into mineral particles or dissolving it into water is known as A) erosion. B) mass movement. C) landmass denudation. D) weathering.
C
The science that specifically studies the origin, evolution, form, and spatial distribution of landforms is A) geology. B) geography. C) geomorphology. D) environmental chemistry.
C
Which of the following is not a denudation process? A) weathering B) erosion C) orogeny D) mass movement
B
Which of the following is not a type of physical weathering process? A) exfoliation B) hydrolysis C) salt crystal growth D) frost wedging
oxidation
a chemical weathering process in which oxygen dissolved in water oxidizes (combines with) certain metallic elements to form oxides
carbonation
a chemical weathering process in which weak carbonic acid (water and carbon dioxide) reacts with minerals that contain calcium, magnesium, potassium, and sodium (especially limestone), transforming them into carbonates
debris avalanche
a mass of falling and tumbling rock, debris, and soil
soil creep
a persistent gradual mass movement of surface soil
landslide
a sudden rapid movement of a cohesive mass of regolith or bedrock that is not saturated with moisture
water
chemical weathering is always in the presence of _____________
parent material
consolidated or unconsolidated material from which soils develop, ranging from unconsolidated sediments and weathered rock to bedrock
dissolution
decomposition or dissolving into fragments or parts
intital
endogenic processes build _________ landscapes
sequential
exogenic processes develop ____________ landscapes
earth flows and mud flows
flows include _______________ and ______________
sinkholes
form in circular depressions and caverns from the weathering of limestone landscapes
joints
fractures or separations in rock that occur without displacement of the sides
mass movement mechanics
physical and chemical weathering processes weaken the surface of the landscape and make it more susceptible to the pull of gravity
mechanical weathering
physical weathering can also be known as __________ ___________
crystallization
process of water on the surface of rocks evaporating, which causes dissolved minerals in the water to grow crystals
hydrolysis
produces a different mineral through the chemical reaction of rocks being chemically broken down
gravity
pulls on a mass until the critical shear-failure point is reached
karst topography
refers to a limestone (CALCIUM CARBONATE) region with a specific landscape of pitted, bumpy surface topography, poor drainage, and well-developed solution channels underground
frost action
repeated freezing (expanding) and thawing (contracting) of water which breaks rocks apart in the process of frost wedging
pressure-release jointing
rocks peeling or slipping off in sheets instead of breaking up into grains
reddish-brown
rusting forms a ______________ stain of iron oxide