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STUDY QUESTIONS |
When rocks, especially igneous and metamorphic rocks are exposed at the surface, either during eruptions or as a result of erosion, the combinations of minerals which were stable under higher temperatures and pressures are no longer in their original environment of formation. As they are exposed to the highly reactive chemicals of the atmosphere and the surface environment, they begin to change both physically and chemically into new combinations, which are now stable in this new, low temperature, low pressure, surface environment. The sum total of these surface changes at the surface, including changes in size and chemistry, is referred to as weathering. Those processes which result in only a change in size are called physical or mechanical weathering, and those which result in new chemical combinations or minerals are called chemical weathering.
The net effect of physical weathering is the reduction in size of the materials at the surface of the earth. Physical weathering has little effect on the makeup of the materials themselves. However, physical weathering promotes chemical weathering by increasing the surface area exposed to the action of various chemicals. |