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Mechanical Weathering. Chemical Weathering. Rates of Weathering. Soil. Soil Conservation. 100 pt. 100 pt. 100 pt. 100 pt. 100 pt. 200 pt. 200 pt. 200pt. 200 pt. 200 pt. 300 pt. 300 pt. 300 pt. 300 pt. 300 pt. 400 pt. 400 pt. 400 pt. 400 pt. 400 pt. 500 pt. 500 pt.
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Mechanical Weathering Chemical Weathering Rates of Weathering Soil Soil Conservation 100 pt 100 pt 100 pt 100 pt 100 pt 200 pt 200 pt 200pt 200 pt 200 pt 300 pt 300 pt 300 pt 300 pt 300 pt 400 pt 400 pt 400 pt 400 pt 400 pt 500 pt 500 pt 500 pt 500 pt 500 pt
Frost action where water seeps into cracks, freezes, and breaks rock during cold weather
The part of plants that gets into cracks, grows, expands, and breaks rock
The process when rocks and sand rub, scratch, and wear away other rocks
True or False: Mechanical weathering changes the rock’s composition
True or False: Over time, water can dissolve the minerals of rocks.
A type of chemical weathering caused by polluted precipitation.
These living things produce acids that break down rock over time.
Chemical weathering that occurs when air reacts with iron in rocks to create rust.
True or False: Wind abrasion is a form of chemical weathering.
True or False: Water can be both a mechanical & chemical weathering agent.
The rate (or time it takes) for rocks to weather depends on climate, elevation, and _______________ (what the rock is made of).
Rocks in __________ climates will weather away faster because they are exposed to more ice, wind, and precipitation.
_____________ Weathering happens faster in warm, humid climates
True or False: The less rock that is exposed, the more it will weather away.
Devil’s Tower (where the softer part of the volcano weathered away but left the harder rock behind) is an example of __________ weathering.
The source (or beginning) of the soil is the __________ rock
The dark soil found in Horizon A full of nutrients from decaying plants and animals
This is found in Horizon R (bottom layer) and has not been weathered at all
___________ occurs in Horizon E when water drains nutrients down into this layer
Thistype of soil sediment has the smallest grain size and water will NOT move through it easily (Sand, Clay, orSilt)
A conservation technique where old harvested plants are left to lay on top of the soil
Planting rows of crops across the slope of a hill to hold create less soil erosion
Planting crops in different fields each year so that nutrients have time to be replenished