Chapter 12 Weathering and Soil This chapter deals with the breakdown of rock. You can think of weathering processes as what connects igneous rocks to sedimentary rocks. Why? Because, as we’ll see, the end products of weathering are the raw material for sedimentary rocks. Think of weathering processes as falling into two categories: (1) mechanical weathering—which involves physical disintegration without significant chemical change, and (2) chemical weathering—which involves decomposition, or chemical alteration. You should become familiar with several examples each of mechanical and chemical weathering processes. Mechanical Weathering Processes Mechanical weathering processes include pressure release, frost action (ice wedging), and plant growth (root action). Pressure release causes deeply buried rocks to crack up as they move from depth, up to the surface. This is a particularly important process for granitic rocks. Once a felsic magma cools to produce a granitic rock at depth, the rock, having cooled, is somewhat brittle, but still under enormous pressure because it’s down deep. Under certain conditions, the rock mass continues to rise, since even though solid, it still may be less dense than the surrounding rock. Decompressiong, expanding, and cracking all occurs as the granitic rock mass buoyantly rises. The decompression process can produce a series of parallel sheets of broken rock, roughly parallel to the ground surface, a feature called sheeting, as shown here: Unloading joints in granodiorite. Image courtesy of Marli Miller, University of Oregon Image source: Earth Science World Image Bank (http://www.earthscienceworld.org/images) 1 Another interesting weathering process is called spheroidal weathering: Spheriodally weathered granitic boulders, South Africa (courtesy Wikipedia; http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:South-africa-sphere-weath.JPG) As granitic rock cools, it typically develops at least three sets of mutually perpendicular cracks (joints), and the rock mass breaks up into angular blocks while still underground. As overburden is removed and the granitic rock decompresses, it continues to break up as it’s exposed. Chemical weathering processes now attack the feldspar minerals in the granitic rock, turning them to clay. This process is more effective at the corners of the jointed blocks (which have a higher surface area/volume ratio) than along the edges, as shown here: Rapid corner weathering of an originally angular joint block produces a rounded corestone (gray). Corestone formation. Once exposed, the weathered debris falls away to reveal a rounded “corestone”. So, the thing that’s interesting about spheriodally weathered granitic rock is that the rounded shapes didn’t form by rolling over and over in a stream. Rather, they formed “in situ” (in place) while still underground…pretty cool! Frost action (freeze-thaw) should be pretty obvious in terms of how it works. As water freezes, it expands approximately 9% in volume. So, as water seeps into an already mechanically 2 weathered rock mass and freezes, the expanding ice forces the cracks farther apart, disintegrating the rock mass in the process. A True Story: how I learned that water expands upon freezing… Back in 1994, I was hired on as a staff geologist at a local environmental consulting firm. One of my first jobs was to meet a drilling crew up in Bakersfield to collect some groundwater samples for contamination testing. After a couple days of drilling, I’d collected about a dozen samples of potentially contaminated groundwater, which I placed in small, glass viles, following standard protocol. Glass is used because it’s chemically inert. In order to keep any dissolved chemicals from seeping out of the viles en route to the laboratory, standard protocol also required the samples to be chilled…which I did. Wanting to make a good impression, my field assistant and I drove back to San Diego late one afternoon, shortly after we finished collecting the last groundwater sample, rather than spending an extra $100 of our project budget for another night’s hotel stay…big mistake, because we hit LA rush hour traffic on the way back. Finally, about 1 AM the next morning we pulled into our office parking lot, exhausted and bleary eyed. My field assistant suggested we just leave our groundwater samples in the truck on ice, and drop them by the lab the next morning. I objected, saying they’d be better off stored in my home fridge until morning (bad idea). Once I got home, I opened the fridge and thought to myself, “Hey, these very expensive groundwater samples would be nice and cool in the fridge, but how much cooler they’d be in my freezer.” So, I stuck the glass water viles in the freezer…Well, you can imagine what happened…All the viles burst as the water turned to ice, rendering the samples worthless! I gotta tell you, that was the worst day of my professional career, having to explain to my new boss what happened to the groundwater samples we’d just collected. Amazingly, I wasn’t fired on the spot…I think they felt sorry for me…After all, who would hire a guy who puts water in the freezer and expects it not to freeze?…Glass water viles in the freezer?! What was I thinking?!!!! On the company nickel, I went back to Bakersfield to re-collect the groundwater samples. I’m still surprised they didn’t dock my pay. Luckily, the groundwater came back clean, free of any contaminants, when tested. The moral of this story? Er, water expands upon freezing (no duh!). For years afterwards, my colleagues at work called me the “ice man.” Plant growth (root action) also contributes to the mechanical weathering of a rock mass. Here’s a link to some nice examples of frost and root action (click each image for a larger view). Chemical Weathering Processes Chemical weathering processes include oxidation—chemical combination with oxygen, solution weathering (dissolution), and hydrolysis—a decomposition reaction involving the components of water (H+ and OH-). Although your book doesn’t use the term hydrolysis, equation D in Table 12.1 is in part a hydrolysis reaction (notice the water). In this case, the potassium feldspar (K-spar) doesn’t 3 simply absorb water; rather, the water chemically combines with the K-spar to create a clay mineral. Here are some examples of important chemical weathering reactions (this list is by no means exhaustive): (1) 4Fe3+ + 3O2 (iron) 2Fe2O3 (hematite) (oxygen) (2) CaCO3 + (calcite) CO2 + (carbon dioxide) (acid) Ca++ H2O (water) (3) 2KAlSi3O8 + 2H+ + 2HCO3- + H2O (K-spar) OXIDATION (iron oxide mineral) (calcium) DISSOLUTION (bicarbonate) Al2Si2O5(OH)4 + 2K+ + 2HCO3- + 4SiO2 - (H+ and OH ) DISSOLUTION 2HCO3- + (clay mineral) (ions in solution) HYDROLYSIS You don’t have to memorize these reactions. I just included them so you can see in detail what’s going on. In equation (1), above, iron is combining with oxygen to produce a common iron-oxide mineral, hematite…literally, rust. Ferromagnesian silicate minerals like olivine, pyroxene, hornblende, and biotite rust to produce hematite and other oxide minerals, as in the picture below: Weathering Rind Oxidized granitic boulder, Angelica, New York (modified from Wikipedia; http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Weathering_9039.jpg) In equation (2), above, calcite, a common non-silicate mineral, is dissolving in acidic water. To keep things simple, I haven’t shown how carbon dioxide breaks down to carbonic acid (H2CO3 >>>> H+ + HCO 3), but when it does, acidic water is produced that can dissolve other minerals, like calcite. When rain falls, carbon dioxide in the atmosphere reacts with the falling water to produce carbonic acid, which can then dissolve minerals like calcite and feldspar when it lands. 4 Equation (3) above is quite complicated, but in general, a feldspar mineral (K-spar) is undergoing two chemical weathering processes, dissolution and hydrolysis, to produce a clay mineral (in this case, kaolinite). Various dissolved ions (charged atoms), and compounds (bicarbonate and silica) are also created as chemical weathering products. Here’s a fascinating animation of a feldspar crystal weathering to clay. Remember Bowen’s reaction series? Click this link to Bowen’s Reaction Series—Fig. 11.19 for a quick review. It turns out that the order of crystallization in a cooling magma is also the order of chemical weathering in various igneous rocks. For example, in a mafic rock like basalt, the olivine crystals (which formed at a higher temperature) will typically decompose via chemical weathering before the pyroxene crystals (which formed at a slightly lower temperature). In a felsic rock like granite, the darker minerals like biotite mica and hornblende (an amphibole) will typically weather out before lower temperature, lighter minerals like muscovite and quartz. Quartz, a low-temperature mineral at the bottom of Bowen’s Reaction series, is very resistant to chemical weathering due to an abundance of strong, silicon-oxygen bonds that resist breakdown. Why is the order of chemical weathering important? Well, for one thing, it gives us a general way to predict which types of rocks will be more resistant to chemical weathering in which climates. For example, which rock, granite (felsic) or gabbro (mafic) would you expect to be more susceptible to chemical weathering in a moist environment, all else being equal? Probably gabbro! Why? Because gabbro typically contains an abundance of high-temperature minerals like olivine and pyroxene, which decompose (chemically break down) rapidly in moist environments. In fact, you can see this effect in eastern San Diego County. As you drive east on Highway 8, past El Cajon, toward the Cuyamaca and Laguna Mountains, you might have noticed that some of the mountain peaks appear smooth and reddish, with few outcrops of exposed rock--like Viejas Mountain (below). This is because the rocks of Viejas Mountain are gabbro, and have undergone extreme chemical weathering, producing thick, reddish soils. Gabbro Viejas Mountain, San Diego County, CA. 5 Notice what you don’t see in the above photo: extensive exposures of fresh rock. Instead, the whole mountain is mantled by a thick, reddish/brownish soil—the chemical residue left by the decomposition of the gabbroic rock. On the other hand, other mountain peaks, like the one below, are irregular, bumpy, and contain abundant bedrock exposures. This is because such peaks are composed of granitic (i.e., intermediate to felsic) bedrock, which contains minerals like quartz, K-spar, and low-temp plagioclase that are more resistant to chemical weathering. Granitic rock Small peak east of Viejas Mountain, San Diego County, CA. We can relate mechanical and chemical weathering processes in a general way to climate, as shown in this diagram: Increasing rainfall Strong chemical weathering Moderate chemical weathering Very slight chemical weathering with frost action Very slight chemical weathering Increasing temperature Weathering intensity and climate. 6 Chemical weathering processes tend to dominate in warm, wet climates, where abundant water is available for chemical reactions and solar heat is available to drive these reactions (upper right portion of above diagram). In contrast, mechanical weathering processes such as frost action dominate in cold climates, where liquid water is less available but where ice freezes and thaws (lower left portion of above diagram). Finally, chemical weathering is very slight in dry climates, which lack liquid water (lower right portion of above diagram). This is why many geologists, including myself, like to hang out in dry climates…the rocks in such climates tend to be “fresher” and therefore easier to study than those in wet climates, where they might be covered by a thick mantle of soil. Imagine trying to study bedrock geology in the middle of the Brazilian rainforest…you’d have to dig pretty deep in many places just to get to the rocks! In addition to common mechanical and chemical weathering processes, you should also become familiar with the end products of weathering, which include: rock fragments clay minerals oxide minerals dissolved ions and compounds (including silica, calcium, sodium, potassium, bicarbonate) All of these products except rock fragments are produced as a result of chemical weathering, with rock fragments obviously a result of mechanical weathering. These end products are important because they are the raw material for sedimentary rocks. Feel free to just skim the section on soils. The only thing I’d like you to know from this section is that soil is itself a weathering product, or rather a mixture of weathering products. Don’t worry about knowing the various soil horizons. If you’re interested in soils, many universities offer entire courses that just focus on soils. Although we’ve considered mechanical and chemical weathering processes separately, they tend to act together on a rock mass, reinforcing one another. Chemical weathering weakens a rock mass (as the feldspars in granitic rock turn to clay, for example), which makes it more susceptible to mechanical breakdown. Mechanical weathering, in turn, increases the surface area of a rock mass and gives a boost to chemical weathering processes (which require access to the interior of a rock mass to work effectively). Here’s an interesting Flash animation demonstrating how mechanical weathering increases rock mass surface area. Here’s a chart of the process described above, which one of my former students nicknamed the weathering cycle: Mechanical Weathering (MW) CW accelerates MW by weakening rock mass… Chemical Weathering (CW) The Weathering Cycle. 7 MW accelerates CW by increasing rock mass surface area…