incremental changes

26
INCREMENTAL CHANGES WIN D, W ATER, AN D IC E

Upload: arien

Post on 24-Feb-2016

37 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Incremental Changes. Wind, Water, and Ice. Remember…. Earthquakes and volcanoes cause sudden and catastrophic change. Most shaping or sculpting of Earth’s surface happens by a combination of slow, step by step changes called weathering and erosion . Weathering:. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Incremental Changes

INCREMENTAL CHANGES

W I ND , W

A T E R , AN D I C

E

Page 2: Incremental Changes

REMEMBER….Earthquakes and volcanoes cause sudden

and catastrophic change.

Most shaping or sculpting of Earth’s surface happens by a combination of slow, step by step changes called weathering and erosion.

Page 3: Incremental Changes
Page 4: Incremental Changes

WEATHERING:Mechanical & Chemical process that

breaks down rocks by means of water, glacial ice, wind and waves.

Page 5: Incremental Changes

EROSIONOccurs when the products of weathering

are transported from place to place.

Page 6: Incremental Changes

DEPOSITION- TO DEPOSITThe process of these materials being laid

down or deposited by wind, water, and ice.

Through the deposition process, material is not gained or lost, it just changes form.

Weathering and deposition never produces new material.

Page 7: Incremental Changes

RED DEER RIVERStarts out crystal clear high in the Rockies, and as

it travels eastward, accumulates tremendous amounts of silt, sand, and dirt- causing the river to change from clear to chocolate brown.

Page 8: Incremental Changes

MECHANICAL WEATHERINGHappens when rock is broken apart by

physical forces, such as water or wind.

In our cold climate, rock is often broken down by water freezing in cracks.

This action slowly helps to break apart even the largest rock formation.

Page 9: Incremental Changes

HOODOOS IN SOUTHERN ALBERTA: WIND

Page 10: Incremental Changes

CHEMICAL WEATHERINGHappens when water and oxygen react with

the minerals in rocks to produce new minerals.

New minerals are usually softer, and can crumble more easily.

Acids can wear away rock by dissolving the minerals in them.

Page 11: Incremental Changes
Page 12: Incremental Changes

BIOLOGICAL WEATHERINGIs the wearing away of rock by living

things, like roots and stems putting enormous pressure on their surroundings.

Page 13: Incremental Changes

EFFECTS OF MOVING WATERRivers and streams are probably the most

powerful forces of erosion that alter the landscape.

Page 14: Incremental Changes

SEDIMENTAs rivers flow, they carry a load of silt,

sand, mud, and gravel called sediment.

Weathering process takes a long time and is influenced by the nature of the moving water- like the speed or steepness of the terrain.

Page 15: Incremental Changes

SEDIMENTATIONThe process of sediments being

deposited, usually at the bottom of oceans, lakes, and rivers.

Page 16: Incremental Changes

FLUVIAL LANDFORMSThese are landforms that are created by

running water.

In Alberta, the Badlands of Southern Alberta are fluvial landforms.

Page 17: Incremental Changes

ERODING AWAYSometimes, erosion can change the

landscape very quickly.

Landslides: sudden and fast movement of rocks and soil down a slope.

Landslide

Page 18: Incremental Changes

GLACIERS- RIVERS OF ICEA glacier is a moving mass of ice and snow.

For over 2 million years, this force of erosion has visited North America, at least 4 times.

Ice once covered areas of Alberta to heights of 600-1000 m and has greatly shaped its landscapes.

Page 19: Incremental Changes
Page 20: Incremental Changes

BEDROCKAs glaciers flow, they pick up large

fragments of rock that act as grinding tools to carve and scrape the landscape.

The glacier grinds the bedrock, the layer of solid rock beneath the loose rock fragments, producing a polished, but scratched, furrowed surface.

Page 21: Incremental Changes
Page 22: Incremental Changes

When the glacier melts, or retreats, it leaves its eroded rock fragments in the form of small hills called drumlins and moraines and snake-like hills called eskers.

Page 23: Incremental Changes

DRUMLINS

Page 24: Incremental Changes

MORAINES

Page 25: Incremental Changes

ESKERS

Page 26: Incremental Changes

CHECK & REFLECTPage 366, #s 1-5

Assess your learning: Page 367, 1-10. Open book test! Monday