Topic 2 - Sub-aerial processes Flashcards

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1
Q

What is weathering?

A
  • The breakdown disintegration of rock in situ (without rock movement), at, or close to ground surface
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2
Q

What is freeze-thaw?

A
  • Occurs when water enters a crack or joint in the rock when it rains and then freezes in cold weather
  • When water freezes, it expands in volume by 10% - this expansion exerts pressure on the rock, which forces the crack to widen
  • With repeated freezing and thawing, fragments of rock break away and collect at the base of the cliff as scree then used as tools by the sea for marine erosion
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3
Q

What is salt crystalisation?

A
  • When salt water evaporates, it leaves salt crystals behind - these can grow over time and exert stresses in the rock, causing it to break up
  • Salt can also corrode rock, particularly if it contains traces of iron
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4
Q

What is wetting and drying?

A
  • Rocks that are rich in clay expand when they get wet and contract as they dry-this can cause them to crack and break upon as they lose coherence and structure
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5
Q

What is biological weathering?

A
  • The break-up of organic activity
  • Thin plant roots grow into small cracks in a cliff face-these cracks widen as the roots grow, which breaks up the rock
  • Water running through decaying vegetation becomes acidic, which leads to increased chemical weathering
  • Birds and animals dig burrows into cliffs, marine organisms are also capable of burrowing into rocks or of secreting acids
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6
Q

What is chemical weathering?

A
  • Involves a chemical reaction where salts may be dissolved or a clay-like deposit may result which is then easily eroded
  • Carbonation
  • Oxidation
  • Solution
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7
Q

What is carbonation?

A
  • Rainwater absorbs carbon dioxide from the air to form a weak carbonic acid-this reacts with calcium carbonate in rocks, to form calcium bicarbonate, which is easily dissolved
  • The cooler the temperature of the rainwater, the more carbon dioxide is absorbed
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8
Q

What is oxidation?

A
  • Rocks disintegrate when oxygen (dissolved in water) reacts with some rock minerals, forming oxides
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9
Q

What is solution?

A
  • The dissolving of rock minerals, such as halite (rock salt)
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10
Q

What is mass movement?

A
  • The downfall movement of material under the influence of gravity
  • Soil creep
  • Mudflows
  • Soilfluction
  • Runoff
  • Landslides
  • Rockfall
  • Landslip/rotational slip/slumping
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11
Q

What is physical weathering?

A
  • Freeze-thaw
  • Salt crystalisation
  • Wetting and drying
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12
Q

What is soil creep?

A
  • An extremely slow form of movement of individual soil particles downhill
  • Caused by particles being displaced due to wetting and drying cycles, followed by downward movement from gravity
  • Cannot be seen in operation, but can see its impacts
  • Shallow terracettes
  • Bending of tree trunks
  • Poles tilted
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13
Q

What are mudflows?

A
  • Involves earth and mud flowing downhill, usually over unconsolidated or weak bedrock-often after heavy rainfall
  • Usually on a slope over 10 degrees
  • Water can’t percolate, therefore saturates top layer
  • Water gets trapped within the rock, increasing pore water pressure, which forces more particles apart and leads to slope failure
  • Often sudden and fast-flowing so can represent a significant natural hazard
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14
Q

What is solifluction?

A
  • Similar to soil creep but specific to cold environments where temperatures fluctuate around freezing
  • In the summer, the surface layer of the soil thaws out and becomes extremely saturated as it sits on top of impermeable permafrost
  • Gentle slopes, smaller than 10 degrees
  • Known as active layer, this sodden soil with its blanket of vegetation slowly moved downhill by a combination of relief and flow-this results in unique landforms known as solifluction lobes
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15
Q

What is runoff?

A
  • When overland flow occurs down a slope or cliff face, small particles are moved downslope towards the coastline
  • When heavy rainfall washes material from the surface of a cliff face over the edge and down onto the shore
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16
Q

What are landslides?

A
  • Involves a block of consolidated rock moving very rapidly downhill a slide plane-often a bedding plane that runs roughly parallel to the surface
  • The moving block of material in a landslide remains largely intact
  • Triggered by earthquakes or heavy rainfall-the slip surface becomes lubricated and friction is sustainably reduced
  • Tend to be very rapid and pose a threat to people and property
17
Q

What is rockfall?

A
  • Involves the sudden collapse or breaking away of individual rock fragments consolidated at a cliff face
  • Commonly associated with steep or vertical cliffs in heavily jointed and quite resistant rock
  • Triggered by physical weathering or an earthquake once broken away from the source, rocks fall or bounce down the slope to form scree at the foot of the slope
18
Q

What is landslip/rotational slip/slumping?

A
  • Its slide surface is curved/concaved rather than flat
  • Occurs in weak and unconsolidated rock, which causes a build up of pore water pressure