CIE A Level Geography Rocks and Weathering.

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76 Terms

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Mapping hazards

Helps planners to know which areas should be avoided to decrease impacts

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Earths structure

Crust

Lithosphere

Asthenosphere

Mantle

Outer core

Inner core

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Lithosphere

The earths crust and rigid upper part of the mantle

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Asthenosphere

Semi-molten and what tectonic plates float on

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Mechanisms of plate movements

Ridge push, Convection drag, Slab pull

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Ridge push

Intrusion of magma into spreading ocean ridges pushes plates apart

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Convection drag

Convection currents in the mantle drags the crust

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Slab pull

Cold, denser oceanic lithosphere sinks due to gravity, and drags the rest of the plate with it

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Example of Constructive boundary

Eurasion - NA

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Example of Destructive (O-C) boundary

Nazca - SA

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Example of Destructive (O-O) boundary

Pacific - Philippine

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Example of Destructive (C-C) boundary

Eurasian - IndoAus

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Example of Conservative boundary

Pacific - NA

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Describe sea floor spreading

Molten magma from inside the earth oozes out and solidifies

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Explain sea floor spreading

This occurs in constructive plate boundaries between oceanic plates that are moved by plate mechanisms

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Describe subduction

When one plate moves under another it sinks

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Describe fold mountains

When plates move towards each other they are forced up as they collide

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Describe ocean ridges

Magma rises as the plates move away from each other and cool when it reaches the surface

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Describe volcanic island arcs

When lithosphere is subducted the slab melts when the edges reach a depth which is sufficiently hot. Hot, remelted material from the subducting slab rises and leaks into the crust, forming a series of volcanoes.

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Explain subduction

Oceanic plates are heavier than continental plates. Zones usually dip at angles 30-70 but older, heavier plates dip more steeply.

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Explain fold mountain building

The lighter plate buckles up and folds

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Explain ocean ridges

Convection currents cause the uplifting of ocean floors

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Explain ocean trenches

When plates converge, denser plates are pushed beneath the lighter plate and deep into the mantle

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Example of sea floor spreading

mid atlantic ridge

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Example of subduction

Nazca - SA

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Example of fold mountains

Himalayas

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Example of ocean ridges

Mid atlantic ridge

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Example of ocean trenches

Mariana trench

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Example of volcanic island arcs

Hawaiian islands

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What is weathering?

The decay and disintegration of rocks in situ

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In situ

Refers to rock that isn't moving or being eroded

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Types of rocks

Metamorphic

Igneous

Sedimentary

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Metamorphic

Minerals in rocks are changed underground by heat and pressure

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Igneous

Magma cools and becomes solid

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Sedimentary

Made of particles of sediment such as sand and clay

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Physical weathering

Freeze thaw

Heating and cooling

Salt crystal growth

Pressure release

Root action

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Freeze thaw

Water trapped in rock joints freezes when temps drop below 0°. When it turns to ice it expands by 9% and exerts enough pressure to shatter the rock.

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Granular Disintegration

Granular disintegration occurs in rocks which consist of more than one mineral as different minerals expand and contract at different temps.

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Heating and Cooling

Surface temps can fluctuate between 80° and 0°. This means that rock surfaces will expand and contract daily.

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Block disintegration

Occurs where a rock consists of only one mineral

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Salt crystal growth

When salt in rocks crystallises out of solution . High temps draw saline groundwater to the surface. Evaporation leaves salt crystals in pores and cracks creating stresses and disintegration. Crystals of sodium sulphate can expand by 300% in areas of high isolation.

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Pressure release

The majority of igneous rocks were created deep under the earths surface at high temps and pressures. As erosion brings many of these formations to the surface they become subject to less pressure. This unloading causes rocks to fracture horizontally. Spiralling, the vertical fractures occur due to the bending stresses of unloaded sheets across a 3D plane.

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Vegetation root action

Some plants and trees grow within the fractures of rock formations. The roots penetrate deep into the soil in search of water and nutrients. As they penetrate the soil they go through cracks, exerting pressure, progressively making cracks deeper and wider.

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Chemical weathering

Hydrolysis

Hydration

Carbonation

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Hydrolysis

This is the weathering reaction between mineral ions and ions of water when water and a surface meet. This results in the decomposition of the rock by forming new compounds and by increasing the pH of the solution involved through the release of hydroxide ions

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Hydration

This is the process where certain minerals absorb water, expand and change. A larger SA also speeds up reactions.

Anhydrite - Gypsum expands by 0.5%

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Carbonation

Rainfall combines with dissolved carbon dioxide or organic acid to form weak carbonic acid

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Factors affecting weathering

Climate (Rainfall and temp (Peltier))

Geology

Vegetation

Relief

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Climate

Peltiers model focuses on the idea that climate is the dominant factor

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Geology

Chemical composition

Nature of cements

Joints and bedding planes

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Chemical composition

Limestone contains calcium carbonate (carbonation)

Granite contains feldspar (hydrolysis)

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Joints and bedding planes

Course grain weather quickly due to large spaces

Joint patterns exert strong control on water mvmt

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Vegetation

Presence of veg can increase weathering through veg. root action and organic acids

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Relief

Steep slopes remove eroded material quickly exposing fresh rock faces

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Mass movement

Is the downward movement of rock and weathered material by gravity alone.

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Factors affecting mass movement

Angle of slope

Nature of debris

Geology

Vegetation

Water

Type and structure of rock

Human activity

Climate

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Types of mass movement

Soil creep

Mudflow

Landslip

Rockfall

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Water and sediment movement

Rain splash

Surface run off

Sheetwash

Rills

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Human causes of slope failure

Excavation

Waste heaps

Loading

Deforestation

Vibrations

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Strategies to reduce mass movement

Pinning

Netting

Afforestation

Drainage

Mapping hazards

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Soil Creep

This is the slow downslope movement of unconsolidated material and soft rock (rarely more than 1-2cm a year.) It is more likely to occur on saturated thick surface deposits on steep slopes.

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Mudflow

This involves the rapid movement of rock and weathered debris mixed with water down valleys. it often occurs on the slopes of active volcanoes in the form of lahars.

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Landslip

Single dramatic events when a section of a hillside becomes unstable and moves downhill after shearing has occured.

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Rockfall

Tectonic stresses and erosion cause granite rock to fracture. Rockfalls later occur along these fractures. Fractures that develop parallel to the surface are called sheeting joints.

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Rain splash

Raindrops impact break up clumps of soil. The lighter materials such as sand and silt are then carried off by surface runoff, leaving behind pebbles and gravel. The fine particles can mix with water and clog up pores, making it impermeable and forming puddles on flat land. On a slope, unabsorbed water flows downhill and carries away loosened soil particles. On a 5° slope 60% of mvmt is downslope. This increases to 95% on a 25° slope and is most effective on 33-45°

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Surface run off

Surface wash occurs when the soils infiltration capacity is exceeded and water therefore flows downhill as a result of gravity. This is more likely to occur in the UK during winter months as ground freeze and drains become saturated.

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Sheet wash

Sheet-wash is the unchanneled flow of water over a soil surface. It is capable of transporting weathered material and often occurs on footpaths or moorlands.

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Excavation

Ground is removed eg in a road and railway cuttings to make level ground.

In areas where there is soft/unconsolidated rock this creates a steep slope liable to mvmt.

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Waste heaps

Waste heaps from mining are often steep and porous which is unstable

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Loading

Building on slopes adds mass that may trigger mass movement

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Deforestation

Decreases interception and takes away binding agents

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Vibrations

Movement of heavy vehicles can trigger mvmt

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Pinning

Drilling a long hole into loose rocks and deep into stable rocks below and bolting them together, essentially binds loose rock down.

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Netting

Metal netting is fastened to road cuttings to prevent loose rocks from falling

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Drainage

Moving water away from vulnerable slopes reduces mass mass and lubrication

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Afforestation

Increasing interception and binding soil together