Mass Movement and Weathering Processes Flashcards
Boring Molluscs
Molluscs live in aquatic or damp habitats and are able to burrow into the rock, which causes it to erode.
Frost Shattering
Also known as Freeze-Thaw. Occurs in cold climates when temperatures are often around freezing point and where exposed rocks contain many cracks. Water enters the cracks during the warmer day and freezes during the colder night.
Oxidation
Chemical weathering involves the alteration of the chemical and mineralogical composition of the weathered material.
Sub-aerial Processes
The processes of weathering and mass movement. Weathering is the breaking down of rock in situ. It can be divided into mechanical and chemical weathering.
Weathering
Weathering is the breaking down or dissolving of rocks and minerals on Earths surface. Water, ice, acids, salt, plants, animals, and changes in temperature are all agents of weathering. Once the rock has been broken down, a process called erosion transports the bits of rock and minerals away.
Mass Movement
The movement of surface material caused by gravity. Geological agents such as water, wind and ice all work with gravity to cause a levelling of land.
Mudflow
A flowing mass of soft, wet, unconsolidated earth and fine-grained debris. It is often made into a liquid substance through rainfall or melted snow and often build up great speed.
Landslide
The movement of rock, earth, or debris down a sloped section of land. Landslides are caused by rain, earthquakes, volcanoes, or other factors that make the slope unstable.
Rockfall
Water enters the joint, freezes and expands, cracking the rock. A scree slope of fallen rock is formed at the bottom of the cliff.
Rotational Slumping
Rotational slumps occur when a slump block, composed of sediment or rock, slides along a concave-upward slip surface with rotation about an axis parallel to the slope.
Scree (Talus)
A mass of small loose stones that form or cover a slope on a mountain.
High Energy Coastline
Waves are high for a significant part of the year, the rate of erosion exceeds the rate of deposition and landforms include headlands and cliffs.
Storm Surges
A rising of the sea as a result of wind and atmospheric pressure changes associated with a storm.