Exogenic and Endogenic Processes Notes
Exogenic and Endogenic Processes Notes
Weathering VS Erosion
Physical break-up:
✓ pressure release
✓ water: freeze - thaw cycles
✓ crystallization of salt in cracks
✓ thermal expansion and contraction
Frost wedging- when water gets inside the joints, alternate freezing and thawing
episodes pry the rock apart.
Salt crystal growth- force exerted by salt crystal that formed as water evaporates from
pore spaces or cracks in rocks can cause the rock to fall apart
A. Exfoliation -Rocks breaking loose along parallel fractures like onion layers
Examples:
C. Freeze-Thaw
D. Hydraulic Action -causes wave-cut platforms and cliff erosion on rocky shorelines
E. Honeycomb Weathering
Salt also works to weather rock in a process called haloclasty. Saltwater sometimes gets
into the cracks and pores of rock. If the saltwater evaporates, salt crystals are left behind.
As the crystals grow, they put pressure on the rock, slowly breaking it apart.
Examples:
For instance, carbon dioxide from the air or soil sometimes combines with water in a
process called carbonation. This produces a weak acid, called carbonic acid, that can
dissolve rock. Carbonic acid is especially effective at dissolving limestone. When carbonic
acid seeps through limestone underground, it can open up huge cracks or hollow out vast
networks of caves.
Major Processes of Chemical Weathering
type of chemical weathering works on rocks that contain iron. These rocks turn to rust in a
process called oxidation. Rust is a compound created by the interaction of oxygen and
iron in the presence of water. As rust expands, it weakens rock and helps break it apart.
C. Hydrolysis- change in the composition of minerals when they react with water
In the process of hydrolysis, a new solution (a mixture of two or more substances) is formed
as chemicals in rock interact with water. In many rocks, for example, sodium minerals
interact with water to form a saltwater solution.
Factors affecting the rate of Weathering
Climate – areas that are cold and dry tend to have slow rates of chemical weathering
and weathering is mostly physical; chemical weathering is most active in areas with high
temperature and rainfall
b. Rock type – the minerals that constitute rocks have different susceptibilities to
weathering. Those that are most stable to surface conditions will be the most resistant to
weathering. Thus, olivine for example which crystallizes at high temperature conditions will
weather first than quartz which crystallizes at lower temperature conditions.
c. Rock structure- rate of weathering is affected by the presence of joints, folds, faults,
bedding planes through which agents of weathering enter a rock mass. Highly-
jointed/fractured rocks disintegrate faster than a solid mass of rock of the same dimension
d. Topography- weathering occurs more quickly on a steep slope than on a gentle one
Agents of Erosion
1. Running Water
“running water” encompasses both overland flow and stream flow. Differentiate overland
flow and streamflow.
Ocean waves contain energy—sometimes a great deal of energy. The energy in waves
comes from wind that blows across the water's surface. Waves are a major force of
erosion along coasts. Waves shape the coast through erosion by breaking down rock and
transporting sand and other sediment. When large waves hit the shore, their energy can
break apart rocks. Waves also erode by abrasion
3. Glaciers
A glacier is any large mass of ice that moves slowly over land. There are two kinds of
glaciers— continental glaciers and valley glaciers. A continental glacier is a glacier that
covers much of a continent or large island.
4. Wind
Wind erodes by: deflation (removal of loose, fine particles from the surface), and abrasion
(grinding action and sandblasting)
5. Groundwater
b. Rainwater reacts with carbon dioxide from atmosphere and soil to form a solution of
dilute carbonic acid. This acidic water then percolates through fractures and bedding
planes, and slowly dissolves the limestone by forming soluble calcium bicarbonate which
is carried away in solution.
6. Gravity
Mass wasting- the downslope movement of soil, rock, and regolith under the direct
influence of gravity
i. As the slope angle increases, the tendency to slide down the slope becomes greater. ii.
Role of water: adds weight to the slope, has the ability to change angle of repose,
reduces friction on a sliding surface , and water pore pressure reduces shear strength of
materials
Exogenic Process: Mass Wasting
Mass wasting - the downslope movement of rock, regolith, and soil under the direct
influence of gravity (Tarbuck, et.al. 2014)
a. Slope Angle
i. Component of gravity perpendicular to the slope which helps hold the object in
place
ii. Component of gravity parallel to the slope which causes shear stress and helps move
objects downslope
iii. On a steep slope, the slope-parallel component increases while the slope-
perpendicular component decreases. Thus the tendency to slide down the slope
becomes greater. All forces resisting movement downslope can be grouped under
the term shear strength which is controlled by factors such as frictional resistance and
cohesion of particles in an object, pore pressure of water, anchoring effect of plant
roots. When shear stress > shear strength , downslope movement occurs
b. Role of water
i. Water has the ability to change the angle of repose (the steepest slope at which a pile
of unconsolidated grains remain stable).
ii. Addition of water from rainfall or snowmelt adds weight to the slope.
✓ Type of material
Did moving mass start out as solid bedrock or as debris (unconsolidated
material at Earth’s surface)?
✓ Movement Type
Flow, slide, or fall
A. slope failure- sudden failure of the slope resulting in transport of debris
downhill by rolling, sliding, and slumping.
i. Slump – type of slide wherein downward rotation of rock or regolith occurs along a
curved surface
ii. Rock fall and debris fall– free falling of dislodged bodies of rocks or a mixture of rock,
regolith, and soil in the case of debris fall
iii. Rock slide and debris slide- involves the rapid displacement of masses of rock or debris
along an inclined surface
b. Sediment flow - materials flow downhill mixed with water or air; Slurry and
granular flows are further subdivided based on velocity at which flow occurs
i. Slurry flow – water-saturated flow which contains 20-40% water; above 40% water
content, slurry flows grade into streams
(1) Solifluction – common wherever water cannot escape from the saturated
surface layer by infiltrating to deeper levels; creates
distinctive features: lobes and sheets of debris
(2) Debris flow – results from heavy rains causing soil and regolith to be saturated
with water; commonly have a tongue-like front; Debris flows
composed mostly of volcanic materials on the flanks of volcanoes
are called lahars. Rodolfo, K.S. (2000) in his paper “The hazard from
lahars and jokulhaups” explained the distinction between debris
flow, hyperconcentrated flow and mudflow: debris flow contains
10-25 wt% water,
ii. Granular flow – contains low amounts of water, 0-20% water; fluid-like behavior is
possible by mixing with air
(1) Creep – slowest type of mass wasting requiring several years of gradual
movement to have a pronounced effect on the slope ; evidence
often seen in bent trees, offset in roads and fences, inclined utility
poles. Creep occurs when regolith alternately expands and
contracts in response to freezing and thawing, wetting and drying, or
warming and cooling
(2) Grain flow – forms in dry or nearly dry granular sediment with air filling the pore
spaces such as sand flowing down the dune face (3) Debris
avalanche – very high velocity flows involving huge masses of falling
rocks and debris that break up and pulverize on impact; often
occurs in very steep mountain ranges. Some studies suggest that
high velocities result from air trapped under the rock mass creating a
cushion of air that reduces friction and allowing it to move as a
buoyant sheet