Download - Soil Evolution

Transcript
Page 1: Soil Evolution

Soil Evolution

Environmental Science

CCTI

Mrs. Conway

Page 2: Soil Evolution

Directions

• Read through the following slides while completing your lab packet.

• Be sure to answer all question in the packet.

• Use this button to move forward

• Use this button to move backward

Page 3: Soil Evolution

Where Does Soil Come From?

• Read the Background Information on your handout.

• Highlight the definitions the of new vocabulary words you encounter.

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What are the six components of soil?

• Rocks and rock particles

• Decaying plant and animal matter (organic)

• Dissolved minerals/ elements

• Soil air in porous spaces (aeration)

• Fungus and bacteria

• Bugs

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What are the two types of weathering?

• Chemical weathering can be the result of plant growth, causing a chemical change.

• Mechanical weathering occurs when water stands in the cracks of rock.

• Read through the next slides while completing page 630 in your packet.

• List and describe four types of chemical weathering and five types of mechanical weathering.

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Chemical Weathering

What are some examples?

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Chemical Weathering

Oxidation: Combines oxygen with another substance in the rock: this usually changes the color of the rock

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Chemical Weathering

• Carbonation: happens in rocks that contain calcium carbonate (limestone); speeds up as the temperature decreases

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Chemical Weathering

• Acids: formed by sulfur and nitrogen compounds and will cause rocks to fall apart

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Chemical Weathering

• Hydration: the incorporation of H+ and OH- ions; this addition causes an increase in volume, adding stress within the rock

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Mechanical Weathering

Two factors are very important for mechanical weathering, wind and water.

What are some examples?

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Mechanical Weathering

• Root Action: As roots grow they break rocks apart

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Mechanical Weathering

• Thermal expansion: especially in deserts, rocks heat up in the day and, as the temperature drops greatly at night, the rocks can flake easily (exfoliate). Freeze/thaw will deposit water in cracks when this freezes the ice pushes outward and causes pieces of the rock to break off.

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Mechanical Weathering

• Hydraulic Action: Water rushes into cracks in rocks; but a tiny bit of air is compressed at the crevice of the crack: when the water recedes the air is forcefully released taking away fragments of rock with it.

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Mechanical Weathering

• Organic Activity: Mosses and lichens attach to rocks and this causes physical as well as chemical breakdown of the rock.

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Mechanical Weathering

• Gravity: Large rocks often fall from mountainsides and as they hit bottom they break into smaller and smaller pieces.

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What is a Soil Profile?

The soil horizons make up the soil profile.

Now turn to Page 632 in your packet!

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Soil Profile: Click on the boxes to move forward!

O (organic)

B (Subsoil)

E (Transition Area)

C (Weathered Parent Material)

R (Parent Bedrock)

A (Topsoil)

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O Horizon• Colors: Black, dark brown

• Structure and Composition: Loose, crumbly, well broken up litter (twigs, leaves)

• Processes occurring: Decomposition

• Some people might not realize that this layer is actually part of the solid ground

• This layer is known as the twig-leaf layer!

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A Horizon

• The A horizon is made of dark colored soil called humus.

• Colors: Dark brown to yellow• Structure and Composition: Generally loose,

crumbly, well broken up because roots are present and seeds germinate here; earthworms and bugs present; minerals present

• Processes occurring: Leaching and nutrient center

• Most roots of vegetation are found here! This is the best soil for growing crops!

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B Horizon

• Colors: Brown, reddish to orange in color

• Structure and Composition: Zone of larger chunks, may be dense, crumbly but mostly cement-like; clay and oxidized materials and organic matter accumulates from A horizon (topsoil)

• Processes occurring: Accumulation

• This layer is less suited for growing crops!

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E Horizon

• Colors: Minerals are moved out from A to B (translocated) so the soil is light in color because the soil silica remains; this is also known as leaching.

• Structure and Composition: Depends upon the mass of the horizons above E; gets more compact as soil evolution develops

• Processes occurring: Transition between A and B (eluviation) where the leaching is predominant

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C Horizon

• Colors: depends upon the color of the parent bedrock

• Structure and Composition: Dense

• Processes occurring: Weathering or disintegration of parent material or parent bedrock

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R Horizon

• Colors: generally solid (gray)

• Structure and Composition: Dense

• Processes occurring: Weathering

• This layer is the parent material from which soil is made!

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How much did you learn?

• Complete the questions located on page 627 and 628.

• Be sure that all answers are complete.

• Use the back or forward arrows to review material.

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You have just completed the Weathering and Soil

Formation/Evolution Tutorial!

Congratulations!


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