1 / 32

General Cross Section of Gaza Aquifer

Clay. calcareous sandstone, unconsolidated sands. Eocene chalks and limestone. marls, marine shales, and claystones. General Cross Section of Gaza Aquifer. Weathering. Relation to Engineering. Soil/Foundation Stability Erosion near the seashore, river plains, harbors Expanding soils

teryl
Télécharger la présentation

General Cross Section of Gaza Aquifer

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. Clay calcareous sandstone, unconsolidated sands Eocene chalks and limestone marls, marine shales, and claystones General Cross Section of Gaza Aquifer

  2. Weathering

  3. Relation to Engineering • Soil/Foundation Stability • Erosion near the seashore, river plains, harbors • Expanding soils • Sand dunes movements • Roads and Highways • River geomorphology • Dams design • Bridges

  4. Figure 6.1

  5. Earth’s external processes • Weathering – the physical breakdown (disintegration) and chemical alteration (decomposition) of rock at Earth’s surface • Mass wasting – the transfer of rock and soil downslope under the influence of gravity • Erosion – the physical removal of material by mobile agents such as water, wind, ice, or gravity

  6. Weathering • Mechanical Weathering • Breaking of rocks into smaller pieces • Types of mechanical weathering • Frost wedging • Unloading • Thermal expansion • Biological activity

  7. Figure 6.3

  8. Frost wedging Figure 6.3

  9. Weathering • Chemical weathering • Breaks down rock components and internal structures of minerals • Most important agent is water • Responsible for transport of ions and molecules involved in chemical processes

  10. Weathering • Major processes of chemical weathering • Dissolution • Aided by small amounts of acid in the water • Oxidation • Any reaction when electrons are lost from one element • Hydrolysis • The reaction of any substance with water • Hydrogen ion attacks and replaces other ions

  11. Figure 6.4

  12. Figure 6.5

  13. Figure 6.6

  14. Table 6.1

  15. Weathering • Alterations caused by chemical weathering • Decomposition of unstable minerals • Formation or retention of stable materials • Physical changes such as the rounding of corners or edges

  16. Rates of weathering Factors affecting weathering • Surface area • Rock characteristics • Rocks containing calcite (marble and limestone) readily dissolve in weakly acidic solutions • Silicate minerals weather in the same order as their order of crystallization

  17. Figure 6.2

  18. Figure 6.9A

  19. Figure 6.9B

  20. Dissolution 20 mm Conventional SEM; 30 kV

  21. Rates of weathering • Climate • Temperature and moisture characteristics • Chemical weathering is most effective in areas of warm, moist climates • Differential weathering • Rocks do not weather uniformly due to regional and local factors • Results in many unusual and spectacular rock formations and landforms

  22. Spheroidal weathering of extensively jointed rock Figure 6.12

  23. Joint-controlled weathering Figure 6.12 D

  24. Weathering of common silicate minerals

  25. Soil • Soil = combination of mineral and organic mater, water, and air • Rock and mineral fragments produced by weathering (regolith) that supports the growth of plants • Humus (decayed animal and plant remains) is a small, but essential, component

  26. Composition of a “good” soil

  27. Soil • Factors controlling soil formation • Parent material • Residual vs. transported soil • Time • Amount of time for soil formation varies for different soils depending on geologic and climatic conditions

  28. Soil • Climate • Most influential control of soil formation • Key factors are temperature and precipitation • Plants and animals • Influence the soil’s physical and chemical properties • Topography • Steep slopes often have poorly developed soils • Optimum terrain is a flat-to-undulating upland surface

  29. Variations in soil development

  30. Idealized soil profile

  31. Soil • Soil erosion • Part of the natural recycling of earth materials • Natural rates of soil erosion depend on • Soil characteristics • Climate • Slope • Type of vegetation

More Related