1 / 11

Lesson 1 Reading Guide - Vocab

Lesson 1 Reading Guide - Vocab. Weathering. weathering mechanical weathering chemical weathering oxidation. Lesson 1-1. Weathering and Its Effects. A. Weathering and Its Effects

chavi
Télécharger la présentation

Lesson 1 Reading Guide - Vocab

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Lesson 1 Reading Guide - Vocab Weathering • weathering • mechanical weathering • chemical weathering • oxidation

  2. Lesson 1-1 Weathering and Its Effects • A. Weathering and Its Effects • 1. The chemical and physical processes that change objects on Earth’s surface over time are called weathering. • 2. Over thousands of years, mechanical weathering breaks up rocks into smaller pieces.

  3. Lesson 1-2 Mechanical Weathering • B. Mechanical Weathering • 1. During mechanical weathering, physical processes break rocks into smaller pieces. • 2. Mechanical weathering does not change the chemical makeup of therock.

  4. Lesson 1-2

  5. Lesson 1-2 Mechanical Weathering(cont.) • 3. When mechanical weathering breaks a large rock into smaller pieces, the total surface area of the rock increases. • 4. Between sandy and clay soils, clay soil holds more water and nutrients because it consists of smaller particles that have more surface area.

  6. Lesson 1-2 Mechanical Weathering(cont.) In ice wedging, water enters cracks in rocks and freezes. Water expandswhen it freezes and makes the cracks larger. 6. Grinding rock away by friction or impact is called abrasion. 7. Plants growing in a crack in a rock and animals burrowing through loose rock can cause mechanical weathering.

  7. Lesson 1-3 Chemical Weathering • C. Chemical Weathering • 1. During chemical weathering, the materials that make up rocks are changedinto new materials. Dr. Marli Miller/Getty Images

  8. Lesson 1-3 • 2. Water is an important agent of chemical weathering becausemost substances dissolve in water. • 3. A(n) acid is a more powerful weathering agent than water. • a. The measure of acidity is called pH. • b. An acid has a pH less than 7. • c. Rain weathers rock because rain is slightly acidic. • d. Acid rain contains pollutants that make its pH less than 5.

  9. Lesson 1-3 Chemical Weathering(cont.) • 4. Oxygen combines with other elements or molecules during oxidation. • a. Most oxygen used in oxidation comes from the air. • b. The product of oxidation is a(n) oxide. • c. Oxides are useful because they form ores, which people use to obtain metals. • d. The outer part of a rock oxidizes the most because it has more contact with oxygen in the air.

  10. Lesson 1-4 What affects weathering rates? • D. What affects weathering rates? • 1. Mechanical and chemical weathering depend on waterand temperature. • a. Mechanical weathering occurs fastest in areas that have a lot of temperaturechanges.

  11. b. Chemical weathering is fastest where the climate is warm and wet. • c. Overall, weathering occurs fastest in regions near the equator. • 2. The type of rock also affects how fast weathering occurs. The most easily weathered mineral in a rock determines how quickly the rock weathers.

More Related