Earth Surface Processes Flashcards

1
Q

Define WEATHERING, both PHYSICAL and CHEMICAL

A

The in-situ breakdown of primary solid phases into its constituent parts.
Physical weathering results in reduced grain size
Chemical weathering is from chemical reactions, which can result in solutions or gases

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2
Q

4 types of physical weathering

A
  • Pressure releases as the rock is uplifted and exposed. It springs apart along planes of weaknesses (joints).
  • Insolation weathering - due to thermal expansion and contraction since rock has a poor heat conductivity and minerals can expand differently - stresses between surface and interior, and between grains
  • Hydration weathering - water absorption can cause swelling and therefore weakness of rocks like clays
  • Frost weathering - water in the cracks changes to ice and expands. A similar processes can occur with salts or even tree roots.
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3
Q

4 types of chemical weathering

A

Carbonate weathering - carbonic acid dissolving carbonates and transfers them to oceans
Silicate weathering - carbonic acid causing substitution of carbonate ion into silicate ion
Oxidation - for example when iron-rich minerals go to hematite
Biochemical weathering when plants take in nutrients.

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4
Q

What is Goldlich’s series?

A

Shows the stability of different rock compositions, from olivine and calcium feldspar to quartz being the most stable.

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5
Q

What is a REGOLITH?

A

the unconsolidated layer of solid material over the bedrock. its thickness is a function of climate.
an example of how it can be affected is if tectonic uplift is much quicker than soil production, hence thinning the regolith.

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6
Q

What is DENUDATION and what are the types?

A

Denudation is a geological process that involves the removal of sediment or rock from a particular area due to the action of natural forces such as erosion, weathering, and mass wasting.
Physical denudation is when sediment is carried through clastics
Chemical denudation is when sediment is dissolved

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7
Q

What is the stream power equation

A

Ω=ρgQS
Q = volume of water flow
S = slope

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8
Q

Types of sediment deposits

A

Clastic e.g. breccia, sandstone
Biogenic e.g. limestone, coal
Chemical e.g. evaporites
Volcaniclastic e.g. tuff

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9
Q

How are grains classified?

A
  • Size - Wentworth grain scale
  • Angularity/Sphericity
  • Matrix- or grain-supported
  • Texturally mature (high matrix pct) or immature (low matrix pct)
  • Compositional maturity - how stable it is i.e. qtz is most stable
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10
Q

Clast composition: Quartz

A
  • Hard, no cleavage.
    • Average sandstone is mainly quartz
    • Often several cycles of deposition/erosion
    • Predominantly derived from granite or gneiss
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11
Q

Clast composition: Feldspars

A
  • Less hard due to cleavage
    • Chemically labile, replaced by clay minerals
    • Typically derived from continental basement, and so an indicator on source.
      Intense weathering leads to breakdown.
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12
Q

Clast composition: Lithic Fragments

A
  • Important in conglomerates, breccias, coarse sandstones
    • Type depends on the source
    • Crystallinity/grain size are always less than the grain size of sediment.
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13
Q

Clast composition: Micas & Clays

A
  • Common in matrixes.
    • Derived from metamorphic/igneous sources
      • Clay minerals are products of weathering or authigenic (in situ) formation
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14
Q

What is the Pettijohn classification?

A

Classifies sandstones on 4 axes:
- triangle of qtz-feld-lf
- 4th axis on pct matrix

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15
Q

Define DIAGENESIS

A

The physical and chemical changes that alter the characteristics of a sediment after deposition. It changes unconsolidated sediment into rock, starting immediately after deposition.

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16
Q

What are some things that occur during diagenesis?

A

It can alter primary minerals.
It decreases pore space
Cements can precipitate - friable means weakly; indurated means strongly
Concretions can occur where cements accrete around a nuclei

17
Q

What does the Hjülstrom diagram show?

A

Which of erosion, transport or deposition will occur at a given flow velocity and grain size. Clays are harder to erode than would be expected due to cohesive forces.

18
Q

What are some depositional sedimentary structures

A

Beds/laminations
Ripples/Dunes - showing flow direction and having X-bedding over time

19
Q

What are some erosional sedimentary structures

A

Flute marks where eddies or objects erode the bed
Tool marks like grooves and bounce marks
Channels formed by rivers

20
Q

What are some post-depositional sedimentary structures

A

Convolute bedding and sand volcanoes can result from dewatering
Load casts and flame structures can result from density differences

21
Q

What environments do deserts form?

A
  • Around 30o or 90o due to cell convections causing high pressure
  • In rain shadows, like the Patagonian over the Andes
  • Continental deserts where air has travelled so far that moisture is lost, like Gobi
22
Q

How can wind ripples differ from water ripples

A

Wind structures are often much bigger.
Wind direction can change more, so different shapes can be created.

23
Q

3 Types of Lake

A

Hydrologically closed (and open) - where the only way out is evaporation
Saline - low rainfall, high evaporation
Ephemeral - periodically drying out, leading to dessications.

24
Q

Types of lake sediment

A

Siliclastic - from rivers and streams. Laminations can get preserved well due to anoxic conditions in stratified lakes
Biochemical - from organisms e.g. carbonates

25
Q

What are ALLUVIAL FANS?

A

Cones of material formed at the break of a slope on the edge of an alluvial plain.
Common in semi-arid regions where water flow is irregular.

26
Q

Types of river

A

Straight

Braided - favoured in high gradient areas. fluctuating discharge, coarse load with high bedload. Bars form that can migrate and cause X-laminations

Meandering - favoured in low gradient areas. Defined by thalweg. Steady discharde, low bedload. Point bars build up on inner banks.

Anastomosing - made of many major stable channels, permanent islands.

27
Q

What is the Galloway diagram?

A

Classifies deltas based on the dominance of wave, tidal and fluvial processes.

28
Q

How do fossils and sediment change with marine depth?

A

sediment gets more rounded and well sorted with depth.
Deeper waters have less fossil diversity, and burrowing changes from vertical burrows in the littoral zone to networks in the Neritic zone, getting shallower.

29
Q

What are turbidity currents?

A

Characterised by the Bouma sequence, turbidity currents are massive downhill marine flows caused by density differences. they are triggered by earthquakes, collapses etc.
Deposits are characterised with coarse layers, with parallel laminated and then cross-bedded sand, then with the standard mud on top. Bioturbations only appear in the mud.

30
Q

What is limestone? What are ooids, micrites and sparites?

A

Where there is no sediment supply, carbonate rocks form from calcifying organisms (biogenic) or from precipitation.

Ooids are spherically-eroded grains formed in warm, agitated waters.

Micrites have a calcite matrix.

Sparites are crystalline looking, forming during diagenesis as cement

31
Q

How are Limestones classified?

A

Folk - based on sparite vs micrite, then through the clast composition,

Dunham - based on grain size, distribution and composition.

32
Q

What are controls on carbonates?

A

Isolation - sediment inhibits carbonate production
Shallow, clear, warm water with normal salinity - to allow for the right organisms to live
Geological age - different organisms formed ancient reefs

33
Q

Describe a reef facies:

A

Fore reef - mainly redeposited sediments brought down from the reef core.
Reef core - comprising the organisms in situ, like bivalves, corals, sponges. No obvious stratification. Coral takes different forms at different points.
Back reef - some skeletal debris, much finer grained carbonate.

34
Q

How do siliceous and carbonate sediments get deposited?

A

They are fine grained ooze upon deposition, which is pressurised to a limestone.

35
Q

How does deep sea clay get deposited?

A

It is mostly wind-blown.

36
Q

What organisms produce carbonates and silicates in deep ocean?

A

Carbonate examples include coccolithophorids (Triassic phytoplankton), planktonic foraminifera (Jurassic zooplankton).

Silicate examples include diatoms (unicellular Cretaceous phytoplankton) and radiolarians (Cambrian zooplankton). The biogenic opal that is formed is metastable, so converts into quartz (chert, which is a microcrystalline quartz) easily once the organism dies.

37
Q

How can alluvial fan sediments be identified?

A

Due to the flow losing energy quickly, the sediment deposited becomes well-sorted, but stay angular due to short travel distance.
Due to the slope of the alluvial fan, if a vertical borehole is taken, the material gets coarser as you go up.

38
Q

How can desert sediment be recognised

A

Red - Fe3+ - oxidising environment
Dune-scale x-beds and ripples
Low biodiversity of fossils
Sediment is small and well sorted and compositionally mature
Desiccations, evaporites

39
Q

Where does each carbonate/silicate organism dominate?

A

Phytoplankton need light to photosynthesise, with diatoms dominating in areas of high-nutrient, high latitude regions and coccolithophorids are most abundant in warm areas controlled by light.
Zooplankton dominate in the other areas, with radiolarians being rare outside warm regions and foraminifera ranging from the equator to polar regions.