WEATHERING PROCESSES
By
Prof.A. Balasubramanian
Centre for Advanced Studies in Earth Science
University of Mysore, India
Course Title: Earth Science
Paper Title: The Dynamic Earth
Table of Contents
Introduction
Weathering
Types of weathering
Physical weathering processes
Chemical weathering processes
Biological weathering processes
Rates of weathering
Weathering Products
Conclusion
Objectives
After attending this lesson, the user would be able to
know the mechanisms of weathering that are
responsible for the dynamic changes of landforms and
relief features on the surface of the earth.
The kinds of weathering, their impacts on rocks and
minerals and their role as geological agents, are also
highlighted.
Introduction
The Earth’s lithosphere is composed of varieties of
rocks and their related relief features. Relief features
are distinct landforms depicting the nature parent
rocks and the geological process that have created
them.
Landforms, their origin, their dynamism and
distribution are studied in earth’s physical sciences
under the branch of geomorphology.
(…Contd)
Introduction
The relief of any land is not permanent on the earth’s
surface. Every block of rock is subjected to aerial
actions and modifications.
Over a period of geological times, these surface
blocks and rocks break down into smaller and finer
pieces and move away from their sources.
(…Contd)
Introduction
Since the rocks present in the uppermost layers of
the earth’s curst are in close interaction with the
processes of atmosphere, hydrosphere and
biosphere, they are dynamic features.
Geomorphic processes
The Sun’s radiant energy, role of water of the
hydrological cycle, role of oxygen and carbon-di-
oxide of the atmosphere and the action of organic
acids over the rock masses, play a significant role in
the material transformation over the surface of the
earth.
(…Contd)
Geomorphic processes
All the rocks exposed at or near the surface of the
earth are subjected to various physical and chemical
processes.
These rocks are mostly unstable and are attacked by
aerial agencies both physically and chemically. The
processes acting on the surface are called as
geomorphic processes.
Geomorphic processes
The notable processes are weathering, mass-wasting,
erosion, transportation and deposition.
In this lesson, the mechanisms of weathering and their
impacts on the rocks and relief features are
highlighted.
Weathering
Weathering is an important geological mechanism
which can destabilize the earth’s surface materials
and remove them by erosive processes. Weathering
is the physical disintegration and chemical
decomposition of a rock mass on the land.
It is a unique phenomena happening on the earth’
surface.
(…Contd)
Weathering
Weathering is a collective term used to denote the
mechanical, chemical and biological(organic)
processes that take place on the earth’s surface.
Weathering of rock-forming minerals can create new
products from pre-existing rocks.
(…Contd)
Weathering
In many regions, soils are the ultimate products of
weathering. Weathering of rocks releases chemical
compounds that become available for biological
processes.
It is necessary to study the factors that are
influencing the weathering processes.
Factors influencing weathering
In simple terms, weathering is defined as the natural
breakdown of rocks into minor fragments, soils and
sediments.
There are many factors which influence the
weathering of minerals and rocks.
(…Contd)
Factors influencing weathering
They are:
Topography
Climatic conditions – temperature and humidity
Physical characteristics of rocks
Chemical and structural characteristics of rocks- their
mineralogy and structural features and
Vegetation- their abundance and type, including the
micro and macro vegetation.
Weathering involves no moving agent of transport.
Impacts of weathering
The impacts of weathering are very phenomenal.
The nature and magnitude of weathering differs from
place to place. The first impact is the physical
modification of pre-existing rocks.
Several modifications are made on the pre-existing
rocks by mechanical forces, chemical reactions and
biological interactions, during the process of
weathering. (…Contd)
Impacts of weathering
These changes are expected in the pre-existing
geologic materials that are exposed at or near the
surface of the Earth.
The second impact is destabilization of masses.
Weathering destabilizes the surface materials and
encourage their removal by erosion. Erosion is done
by geological agents like running water, wind, glaciers
and water waves.
(…Contd)
Impacts of weathering
The third impact of weathering is the formation of
soils and sediments. The soils are the products of
weathering. Weathering creates both soils and other
loose rock fragments.
The fourth impact of weathering is the chemical
modification. Weathering releases several chemical
compounds from the parent rocks and leave them to
support the biological processes.
Types of weathering
Weathering is a general term for several processes. In
general, weathering is of three types as:
Physical weathering
Chemical weathering and
Biological weathering.
The chemical and physical weathering often go hand in
hand. Physical weathering can occur due to
temperature, pressure, frost, etc.
(…Contd)
Types of weathering
Living organisms may contribute to mechanical
weathering, as well as chemical weathering.
Lichens and mosses that are growing on bare
rock surfaces may create a more humid chemical
microenvironment.
(…Contd)
Types of weathering
The attachment of these organisms to the rock surface
enhances the physical as well as chemical breakdown of
the surface layer of the rocks. These are all very slow
and silent processes.
Physical weathering
Physical weathering is also called as mechanical
weathering. Mechanical weathering is related to the
physical breakup of rocks into small pieces and
fragments. In physical weathering, there is no change
in the chemistry of the parent rock.
(…Contd)
Physical weathering
The physical characteristics of rocks also influence
the process of physical weathering.
The characteristics are differential composition,
particle size, the hardness and degree of
cementation. Some rock bodies are very resistant
due to their strong physical properties.
Physical weathering
They may not be attacked by physical weathering
processes.
The structure of rocks are fully favourable to
weathering activities. Presence of joints in rock
bodies are typical examples.
Chemical weathering
Chemical and structural characteristics of
minerals present in rocks are also expected to
play a significant role in weathering.
(…Contd)
Chemical weathering
Chemical weathering changes the composition of
rocks, often transforming them when water
interacts with their minerals to create various
chemical reactions.
Chemical weathering is a gradual and ongoing
process as the mineralogy of the rock adjusts to
the near surface environment.
(…Contd)
Chemical weathering
For minerals of given particle size, chemical and
crystalline characteristics determine the ease of
decomposition.
(e.g.) gypsum – sparingly soluble in water, is
dissolved and removed in solution form under high
rainfall.
(…Contd)
Chemical weathering
Ferro magnesium minerals are more susceptible to
chemical weathering than feldspar and quartz.
Tightness of packing of ions in crystals is yet another
property for encouraging mineral weathering
processes.
(…Contd)
Chemical weathering
Less tightly packed minerals, like olivine and biotite
are easily weathered as compared to tightly
packed zircon and muscovite (resistant).
Topography and climate
Topography is an important factor in relating rocks
with the atmospheric pressure, temperature and
water vapor. The climatic condition tends to control
the kind and rate of weathering.
(…Contd)
Topography and climate
Under conditions of low rainfall, there is a dominance
of physical weathering which reduces the size and
increases the surface area with little change in
volume.
The increase in moisture content encourages both
chemical as well as mechanical changes.
(…Contd)
Topography and climate
This also creates new minerals and soluble products.
The rates of weathering are generally fastest in
humid tropical regions as there is sufficient moisture
and warmth to encourage chemical decomposition.
(…Contd)
Topography and climate
The easily weatherable minerals disappear on
account of intense chemical weathering and more
resistant products (hydrous oxides of Fe and Al)
tend to accumulate. Climate controls the dominant
type of vegetation which in turn controls the
biochemical reactions in soils and mineral
weathering.
Rock Type
The rock type determines the resistance of the rock
to the weathering processes that operate in that
particular environment.
Each rock type is composed of a particular set of
minerals, which are joined together by crystallisation,
chemical bonding or cementing.
(…Contd)
Rock Type
When the forces of plate tectonics move these
rocks from the environment in which they formed
and expose them to the atmosphere they begin to
weather.
Rock Structure
Highly jointed or faulted rocks present many planes
of weakness along which weathering agents (e.g.
water) can penetrate into the rock mass.
Erosion
The dynamism and efficiency of erosion determines
how rapidly any weathered material is removed, how
frequently fresh rock is exposed to weathering, and
if deeply weathered profiles are preserved.
Time
The duration of the period that the same type of
weathering has been operating, uninterrupted by
climatic change, earth movements, and other factors,
determine the degree and depth to which the rocks
have been weathered.
Physical weathering processes
Physical weathering happens especially in places
where there is little soil and few plants grow, such as
in mountain regions and hot deserts.
The types of physical weathering include; abrasion,
crystallization, root wedging, insolation weathering,
human mining, animal activity, tumbling,
compressional stress, crushing waves, tensional
stress.
(…Contd)
Physical weathering processes
Physical weathering is more effective in areas
which have a little vegetation, a large diurnal range
of temperature or, temperatures fluctuating
around 0 degrees Celsius.
Abrasion
The primary process of physical weathering is
abrasion. It is the process in which rock blocks are
reduced in their sizes. Sand and other particles
normally move above rock bodies.
The mechanical scraping of a rock surface by friction
between rocks and these moving particles is known as
abrasion. Particles are transported by wind, glacier,
waves, gravity, running water or erosion.
(…Contd)
Abrasion
After friction, the moving particles dislodge the loose
and weak debris from the sides of the rock. These
particles can be dissolved in the water and taken
away to some other location.
Abrasion by water, ice, and wind processes loaded
with sediment can have tremendous cutting power.
(…Contd)
Abrasion
The intensity of abrasion depends on the hardness,
concentration, velocity and mass of the moving
particles. The major incidences responsible for
physical weathering are expansion resulting from
unloading, crystal growth, thermal expansion,
organic activity and colloidal plucking.
Mechanisms of Physical weathering
The major mechanisms of physical weathering include:
Freezing and thawing
Root wedging and
Heat Spalling.
Recurring hotness and coldness is an important
controlling factor in weathering. One of the main
causes of physical weathering is the formation of ice in
cracks or cavities within rocks.
Freezing and thawing
Block disintegration occurs when rocks split along
joints. This can happen as a result of repeated
cycles of freezing and thawing. Freezing and thawing
are the first set of processes.
First, water soaks into the cracks or cavities, of the
rocks existing below the surface and get sealed up.
(…Contd)
Freezing and thawing
Then, if the temperature falls low enough during
night times, the water freezes. When water freezes
into ice, its volume gets increased by nine percent.
As a result of this, it expands (thaws) in the cracks
and may push hard enough to split the rock into
minor fragments.
(…Contd)
Freezing and thawing
Under specific circumstances, this expansion is able
to displace and create fractures in most of the
rocks.
Not all volumetric expansion is caused by the
pressure of the freezing water; it can be caused by
stresses in water that remains unfrozen.
Frost weathering
Frost weathering is a collective name given for
several mechanical weathering processes induced by
stresses created by the freezing of water into ice.
The term includes a variety of processes such as
frost shattering, frost wedging and cryofracturing.
(…Contd)
Frost weathering
The process may act on a wide range of spatial and
temporal scales, from minutes to years and from
dislodging mineral grains to fracturing boulders.
Frost weathering
Frost weathering is mainly driven by the frequency
and intensity of freeze-thaw cycles and the
properties of the materials subject to weathering.
It is most pronounced in high altitude and latitude
areas.
Root Wedging
The second mechanism is the root wedging. Plant
root, have a great role to play in weathering. Plants
are effective agents of mechanical weathering. Roots
can penetrate through the cracks of rocks to depths
of several meters.
(…Contd)
Root Wedging
As the roots grow, they exert a tremendous
amount of pressure on the walls of the cracks. This
breaks them into pieces. Root wedging is a major
process of mountains containing Forests and natural
vegetation.
Heat spalling
The weathering due to fluctuation in temperature is
termed as 'Thermal Weathering'. It is observed in
almost all the climatic zones. It is more intense in
regions characterized by sharp temperature
fluctuations, dry air, absence or poorly developed
vegetation cover.
(…Contd)
Heat spalling
Heat Spalling is a major process of mechanical
weathering. Heat from forest fires will cause the
outer surface layers of rock to expand quickly and
break away in spalls. Most igneous and metamorphic
rocks are polyminerallic i.e. composed of several
minerals.
(…Contd)
Heat spalling
These minerals have different coefficients of thermal
expansion and it causes differential expansion of
minerals, thus gives rise to minute internal fracturing.
Even in monominerallic-rocks, the liner
co-efficient of expansion of mineral differs from one
direction parallel to the crystallographic axis to the
other.
(…Contd)
Heat spalling
Thus, monominerallic-rocks also disintegrate due to
temperature changes.
Rocks composed of different coloured minerals also
undergo differential expansion. This is due to the fact
that dark minerals are more strongly heated than the
lighter ones.
(…Contd)
Heat spalling
The difference in their volumetric expansion may also
lead to the development of cracks and gradual
disintegration of the rock. This process is also known
as 'granular'-disintegration'.
Exfoliation
There are two more processes of physical
weathering as exfoliation and spheroidal weathering.
Exfoliation denotes the loss of outer layers of rock
bodies as it weathers and detaches from the main
mass. This leaves a dome like structure.
(…Contd)
Exfoliation
Exfoliation is a form of mechanical weathering in
which curved plates of rock are stripped from rock
below.
Exfoliation occurs particularly in hot dry desert
climates, and on sheets of rock. Exfoliation domes
are typical geomorphic features.
(…Contd)
Exfoliation
In this process, the separation of successive thin
shells, or spalls happen from massive rocks like
granites or basalts. This is common in regions that
have moderate rainfall. The thickness of individual
sheet or plate may be from a few millimetres to a
few metres.
Spheroidal weathering
Spheroidal weathering is a form of chemical
weathering that affects systematically jointed bedrock
that results in the formation of concentric or
spherical layers of highly decayed rock within
weathered bedrock that is known as saprolite.
(…Contd)
Spheroidal weathering
When saprolite is exposed by physical erosion, these
concentric layers peel (spall) off as concentric shells.
Spheroidal weathering is a unique process.
It is a kind of chemical weathering of systematically
jointed, massive rocks, including granite, dolerite, basalt
and sedimentary rocks such as silicified sandstone. It
occurs as the result of the chemical alteration of such
rocks along intersecting joints.
Chemical weathering processes
The second major type of weathering is the Chemical
Weathering:
Itis the process of decomposition of Earth’s surface
materials.
It is done by various agents and chemical reaction.
The reactions, here, are exothermic and result in the
increase in volume of minerals that contribute to the
physical disruption of rock.
Effectiveness of chemical weathering
The effectiveness of chemical weathering, is directly
related to the
Mineral stability in weathering
Amount of surface area exposed, which itself is
exponentially related to the
Density of fractures in a rock.
Rate of chemical weathering
The rate of Chemical weathering depends on various
factors like
Temperature
Amount of surface area and
Availability of water or natural acid.
Impacts of chemical weathering
Most chemical weathering results in
An increase in bulk with resulting strains and stresses
within the rocks.
Formation of some lower density minerals.
Reduction in particle size and increase in surface area
of masses.
Growth of more mobile minerals and formation of
More stable minerals.
Processes of chemical weathering
The major processes involved in chemical weathering
are:
Solution
Oxidation
Hydration and Hydrolysis
Carbonation – Dissolution.
Solution
Solution is the process of dissolving mineral
constituents by water or acid.
Most minerals have low solubility in pure water,
but rain contains carbonic acid, so that carbonate
minerals dissolve readily in acidic solutions.
Some substances present in the rocks are directly
soluble in water.
(…Contd)
Solution
The soluble substances are removed by the
continuous action of water and the rock no longer
remains solid and form holes, rills or rough surface
and ultimately fall into pieces or decomposes.
The action is considerably increased when the
water is acidified by the dissolution of organic and
inorganic acids.
Hydration
Hydration involves two processes as hydration and
hydrolysis. Hydration involves absorption of water.
Chemical combination of water molecules with a
particular substance or mineral leading to a change
in structure.
Soilforming minerals in rocks do not contain any
water and they under go hydration when exposed
to humid conditions.
(…Contd)
Hydration
Rain, streams, and seawater dissolve minerals from
rocks, causing the rocks to crumble. For example
water dissolves the mineral feldspar from granite,
leaving grains of quartz, a mineral that forms sand.
Upon hydration there is swelling and increase in
volume of minerals.
(…Contd)
Hydration
The minerals loose their luster and become soft. It is
one of the most common processes in nature and
works with secondary minerals, such as aluminium
oxide and iron oxide minerals and gypsum.
Some of the typical mineral weathering reaction can
easily illustrate these.
(…Contd)
Hydration
Conversion of haematite into Limonite is a typical example.
2Fe2O3 + 3HOH -> 2Fe2O3 .3H2O
(Hematite) (Red) (Limonite) (Yellow)
Conversion of bauxite into hydrous aluminum oxide is
another example.
Al2O3 + 3HOH -> Al2O3 .3H2O
(Bauxite) (Hydrous aluminium Oxide)
(…Contd)
Hydration
Conversion of anhydrite into gypsum is another example.
CaSO4 + 2H2O -> CaSO4 .2H2O
(Anhydrite) (Gypsum)
Conversion of olivine into serpentine in yet another
example.
3(MgO.FeO.SiO2) + 2H2O -> 3MgO.2SiO2.2H2O + SiO2 +
3H2O
(Olivine) (Serpentine)
(…Contd)
Hydrolysis
Hydrolysis is also a process of chemical
weathering. It is due to the dissociation of H2O
into H+ and OH-ions which chemically combine
with minerals and bring about changes, such as
exchange, decomposition of crystalline structure
and formation of new compounds. Water acts as a
weak acid on silicate minerals.
(…Contd)
Hydrolysis
Reaction between mineral and water leads to the
formation of a new mineral or dissolved material.
Hydrolysis is the most important process in
chemical weathering.
It involves formation of hydroxyl ions and does
not represent a chemical change.
(…Contd)
Hydrolysis
Hydrolysis of feldspar, for example, produces clay.
KAlSi3O8 + H2O -> HAlSi3O8 + KOH
(Orthoclase) (Aluminosilicic Acid + clay)
Oxidation
Atmosphere contains 21% of free oxygen. Whereas
the oxygen content of air dissolved in water is 30-
35%. These two forms of oxygen are the most
active chemical agents for weathering.
Oxidation of Minerals and Rocks is an effective
process in decoloration and decomposition of
materials. (…Contd)
Oxidation
In this process, the atmospheric oxygen combines
with the metal ions of minerals to form oxides
(or hydroxides).
Sulphide minerals become unstable & gradually
substituted by sulphates.
(…Contd)
Oxidation
The equations of Oxidation (attack by oxygen)
are as follows:
2Fe2SiO4 (olivine) + H2O + O2 =
FeO.OH (goethite ) + dissolved silica
(…Contd)
Oxidation
In the process of oxidation, the mineral Geothite
dehydrates to form hematite, which is a very stable
iron oxide. Geothite is yellowish color, while
hematite is brick red in color.
Thus, rocks rich in iron oxides tend to form mainly
red soils.
(…Contd)
Oxidation
Eg. FeS2 + 8HCO2 + 7.5 O2 =
Fe2O3 + 4SO4-2 + 4CO2 + 4H2O
Pyrite oxidizes rapidly to form hematite in the
presence of water and oxygen. The oxidation
process is more active in the presence of moisture
and results in hydrated oxides.(e.g) minerals
containing Fe and Mg. (…Contd)
Oxidation
4FeO (Ferrous oxide) + O2 -> 2Fe2O3
(Ferric oxide)
4Fe3O4 (Magnetite) + O2 -> 6Fe2O3
(Hematite)
2Fe2O3 (Hematite) + 3H2O -> 2Fe2O3 .3H2O
(Limonite)
(…Contd)
Oxidation
The minerals which are prone to chemical attack
are, Feldspars, Pyroxenes and Amphiboles.
The minerals that are resistant to chemical attack
are Quartz and Clay minerals (e.g Kaolinite).
Carbonation and Dissolution
Carbonation is the reaction of carbonate or
carbonate ions with minerals. As rainwater falls
through the atmosphere it dissolves small amounts
of carbon dioxide.
The atmospheric carbon dioxide when dissolved in
water it forms carbonic acid.
(…Contd)
Carbonation and Dissolution
Carbonic acid plays a significant role in chemical
weathering. Carbonic acid is formed naturally in
rainwater. Additional carbon di oxide is picked-up
in the ground from decaying vegetation.
Carbonic acid is the principal weak acid- responsible
for chemical weathering.
(…Contd)
Carbonation and Dissolution
2H2O + CO2 -> H2CO3
This carbonic acid attacks many rocks and minerals
and brings them into solution.
The carbonated water has an etching effect up on
some rocks, especially limestone.
(…Contd)
Carbonation and Dissolution
The removal of cement that holds sand particles
together leads to their disintegration.
CaCO3 + H2CO3 -> Ca(HCO3)2
(Calcite) slightly soluble (Ca bi carbonate)
readily soluble
(…Contd)
Carbonation and Dissolution
The formation would be:
H2O + CO2 = H2CO3 = H + 1 (carbonic acid) +
HCO3-1 (bicarbonate ion)
The hydrogen ion in solution (H +1) is very reactive.
For example, it can attack Feldspar and cause the
reaction of feldspar with water (hydrolysis).
(…Contd)
Carbonation and Dissolution
Acidic rainwater is also very effective at breaking
down calcium carbonate.
Calcium carbonate + carbonic acid=calcium ions +
bicarbonate ions
CaCO3 + H2CO3 = Ca++ + 2HCO3-1
Biological weathering processes
Unlike physical and chemical weathering, the
biological or living agents are responsible for both
decomposition and disintegration of rocks and
minerals. The biological life is mainly controlled
largely by the prevailing environment.
(…Contd)
Biological weathering processes
Biological weathering comprises a group of
processes that are caused by, or assisted by, the
presence of vegetation, or to a lesser extent
animals, including root wedging and the production
of organic acids.
Man and Animals
The action of man in disintegration of rocks is well
known as he cuts rocks to build dams, channels and
construct roads and buildings. All these activities
result in increasing the surface area of the rocks for
attack of chemical agents and accelerate the process
of decomposition.
(…Contd)
Man and Animals
A large number of animals, birds, insects and
worms, by their activities they make holes in them
and thus aids for weathering.
In tropical and sub tropical regions, ants and
termites build galleries and passages and carry
materials from lower to upper surface and excrete
acids. Rabbits, by burrowing in to the ground,
destroy soft rocks. (…Contd)
Man and Animals
Moles, ants and bodies of the dead animals,
provides substances which react with minerals and
aid in decaying process.
The earthworms pass the soil, through the
alimentary canal and thus bring about physical and
chemical changes in soil material.
Higher Plants and Roots
The roots of trees and other plants penetrate into
the joints and crevices of the rocks.
As they grew, they exert a great disruptive force and
the hard rock may break apart. (e.g.) pipal tree
growing on walls/ rocks. Some roots penetrate
deep into the soil and may open some sort of
drainage channel. (…Contd)
Higher Plants and Roots
The roots running in crevices in limestone and
marble produces acids. These acids have a solvent
action on carbonates.
The dead roots and plant residues decompose and
produce carbon dioxide which is of great
importance in weathering.
Role of Micro- organisms
In early stages of mineral decomposition and soil
formation, the lower forms of plants and animals
like, mosses, bacteria and fungi and actinomycetes
play an important role.
They extract nutrients from the rock and N from air
and live with a small quantity of water.
(…Contd)
Role of Micro- organisms
In due course of time, the soil develops under the
cluster of these micro-organisms.
This organism is closely associated with the decay of
plant and animal remains and thus liberates nutrients
for the use of next generation plants and also
produces CO2 and organic compounds which aid in
mineral decomposition.
(…Contd)
Role of Micro- organisms
Organisms can assist in breaking down the rocks
into sediments or soils.
Lichens, fungi and other micro-organisms are the
typical examples.
Rates of weathering
There are several factors determining the rate of
weathering. The notable ones are:
Climate
Biota (Organisms)
Time
Mineral Composition.
(…Contd)
Rates of weathering
Climate, which is usually measured in terms of
temperature and moisture, can drastically affect the
rate of weathering.
High amounts of water and higher temperatures
generally cause chemical reactions to run faster.
(…Contd)
Rates of weathering
Thus warm humid climates generally have more
highly weathered rock, and rates of weathering are
higher than in cold dry climates.
Example: limestones in a dry desert climate are
very resistant to weathering, but limestones in a
tropical climate weather very rapidly.
(…Contd)
Rates of weathering
A high temperature and high amounts of water also
controls vegetation which indirectly affects the rate.
Seasonality of precipitation affects the rate of
weathering as well.
Organisms (Biota)
Animals-burrowing organisms like rodents,
earthworms & ants, bring material to the surface
were it can be exposed to the agents of
weathering.
Time
Weathering is a slow process. When we speak of
time in a geologic sense, millions of years are often
used as the units.
The bedrock of Greenland has barely been
weathered and its age is over 3.5 billion years.
The longer that a rock has been exposed to the
weather, the faster it weathers.
Mineral Composition
All chemical and physical properties are
determined by the mineral composition of the
rock.
Mineral composition is more important in
determining the rate of chemical weathering.
(…Contd)
Mineral Composition
Those minerals that are most reactive with acids,
water, and air are weathered at a more rapid rate.
Mineral composition also affects physical weathering.
Minerals that are soft (hardness lower than six) can
be easily abraded and blasted.
Slope and weathering
Slope is yet another property for weathering. On
steep slopes weathering products may be quickly
washed away by rains.
On gentle slopes, the weathering products
accumulate. On gentle slopes water may stay in
contact with rock for longer periods of time, and
thus result in higher weathering rates.
Porosity, faults and shears in materials
Porosity, faults and shears in materials are also
controlling factors for weathering.
Porous sediment equals better circulation and thus
faster weathering process.
(…Contd)
Porosity, faults and shears in materials
Impermeable rocks will mean that no or little
circulation will take place in rocks and weathering
will be slower.
Enhanced weathering rate occurs if faults and
shears are present in rocks.
Exposure
Rocks that are exposed to the atmosphere tends
to weather much quicker.
Bed rock that is covered by soil and vegetation may
not weather as quickly.
Particle Size
The particle size of the material can affect the rate
of weathering.
The smaller the particle size, the faster it will
weather.
The more surface area that is exposed, the more it
will weather.
Effect of climate
Rapid weathering occurs in hot and wet climates.
Cold, moderately dry climates experience intense
mechanical weathering due to frost wedging.
Cold, dry climates have very slow rates of rock
weathering.
Weathering Products
Weathering gradually weakens rocks, and
eventually produces new geological materials (rock
fragments, sands, silts and clays) that are more
stable in the new environment.
Weathering generally produces finer and less dense
rock materials, and weaker, more porous and
permeable rock masses.
(…Contd)
Weathering Products
In the tropics and subtropics, intense weathering, in
the hot and humid conditions, produces thick
weathered profiles, which may be up to 100 metres,
or more, thick.
Weathering processes penetrate down discontinuities
(planes of weakness), such as faults and joints, in the
rock mass and then attack the faces of the joint-
bounded blocks, penetrating the solid blocks.
(…Contd)
Weathering Products
Weathering preferentially attacks the corners and
edges of the joint blocks, causing them to become
rounded.
This action is assisted by stress release, which
causes the rock to flake into curved shells in a
process termed exfoliation.
Behavior of Geologic materials
Geologic materials are used in construction of
buildings. These are subjected to weathering
depending upon the rock’s fundamental properties
of hardness, durability, and stability over time.
Mineral weathering plays a prominent role in many
biogeochemical and geomorphological processes.
(…Contd)
Behavior of Geologic materials
Soil is the ultimate product of weathering. It supplies
nutrients to soils and streams, accelerates physical
erosion by weakening bedrock and producing easily
erodible soil, and modulates earth's long-term
climate by drawing down atmospheric carbon
dioxide.
The temperature and rainfall
The temperature and rainfall of a region controls
the conditions of weathering.
When the temperature is very low mechanical
weathering take the lead role. When the
temperature increases and the rainfall is also more,
chemical processes take the lead role.
(…Contd)
The temperature and rainfall
Weathering is one of the major catalyst for
promoting the rock cycle.
It plays a very unique role in the rock cycle.
Creation of soils and sediments are done by the
weathering processes.
Unloading
Another main type of physical weathering results
from unloading. Unloading occurs when overlying
material, such as soil or another rock stratum, is
removed (most commonly through erosion) and
confining pressure on the underlying rock is
decreased.
(…Contd)
Unloading
In response, the rock generally fractures into sheets
which lie perpendicular to the direction in which
pressure is released.
Since the most common occurrence is the removal
of a horizontal layer of material above the rock, the
results of unloading are often seen as sheets of rock
which lie parallel to the surface topography.
Conclusion
Geomorphology is the study of the nature and
origin of landforms, particularly of the formative
process of weathering and erosion that occur in the
atmosphere and hydrosphere.
These processes continually shape the earth's
surface and generate the sediments that circulate in
the Rock Cycle.
(…Contd)
Conclusion
Landforms are the result of the interactions among
the geosphere, atmosphere and hydrosphere.
It is very essential to study these earth’s dynamic
processes, because most of our human activities
are on these landscapes and landforms.
Thank You