Name______Test Date______Period______
Weathering, Erosion, and Soil Study Guide
Word Bank – Use each word once.
Abrasionangle of reposebreakingcoldcontinentaldeflationdeposition
differentdryduneserosionfasterfertileflatfossil fuels
glaciergravityhorizonshumusinfiltratesironleachinglitterloess
mass movementmoremorenutrientsoxygenparent rock
partially-weatheredpowerfulsaltationsandbarssidesslopesslowlyslowly
smallersubsoilsurfacetopsoilvalleyvolumewaterwaterwater
warmweakwetwindwind
- The texture of soil which would provide the most nutrients for plants would have a lot of ______or decomposed organic material, not many large rocks, is not too close to the bedrock, and will hold the right amount of water.
- Mechanical weathering caused by the repeated freezing and thawing of ______breaks down rocks and forms soil.
- Acid precipitation, plant acids, and oxidation are all examples of chemical weathering. Acid precipitation is created when ______are burned. Some plants create acids as they grow that dissolve the rocks they live on. Oxidation is a chemical reaction that happens when ______combines with ______and water.
- Soil is made of sand, silt, clay, humus, air, and water. Soil develops in layers called ______.
O – This horizon is covered with twigs, leaves, and bark called______. Organic material from dead plants and animals is also present. As this organic material decomposes, it turns into humus.
A – This is the ______. It is a dark color.
E – Intense ______happens here. Minerals dissolve out of the soil as water ______downward.
B – This is the ______. The dissolved minerals and nutrients from above collect here.
C – This is the ______bedrock.
R – Unweathered bedrock (also known as ______)
- Larger rocks weather ______because they have less surface area compared to their ______. ______pieces of rock weather ______because they have ______surface area compared to their volume.
- Remember differential weathering? Some rock material is harder than others and is more resistant to weathering. While the harder rocks weather ______, the softer surrounding rocks wear away, leaving the hard rock exposed at the ______.
- Abrasion happens when ______or ______moves sand and silt against exposed rocks which causes them to wear away. The longer a rock is exposed to ______, the more smooth and rounded it will become.
- Chemical weathering happens faster in regions that have a ______and ______climate. It happens more slowly where the climate is ______and ______.
- Contour plowing is when farmers plant rows of crops along the ______of hills to prevent erosion and conserve soil. Terracing is when farmers dig ______surfaces into the ______of steep hills or mountains. Crop rotation is a soil conservation strategy where farmers plant ______crops each year so they use fewer or different ______from the soil. Some crops even put nutrients back into the soil.
- ______soil has the ability to hold lots of nutrients for plants to use.
- Weathering is the ______down of rock material into smaller pieces. Erosion happens next when ______, ______, or ______move the small pieces to a different place. When the pieces get to a calm place, they drop out of the wind, water or gravity that has carried it, and that is called ______. ______are created when deposition happens in areas like the river deltas or inside the bend of a river.
- Water is ______dense than wind, so it is a more ______agent of erosion, and it works faster in shaping the Earth’s surface. Wind is a very ______agent of ______, so change in the Earth’s surface happens slowly over a very long time. ______happens when wind removes fine sediment. When the small particles bounce and skip in the direction of the blowing wind that is called ______. When sand is deposited, ______form. They are mounds of sand that constantly shift as the wind continues to blow. ______is a special kind of fine-grained glacial sediment that has been deposited by wind.
- Gravity also causes erosion. The ______is the steepest angle rock material can hold on without sliding downhill. When the angle is too steep, ______happens. Landslides, mudflows, slumps, and creeps are all examples of mass movement. Mass movement of ice is called a ______. ______glaciers cover a very large area with very thick ice. They create a flattened landscape with small, round lakes called kettles. ______glaciers build up in mountainous areas and carve out U-shaped valleys that rivers run through.