Weathering describes the breaking down or dissolving of rocks and minerals on the surface of the Earth.
Physical weathering is caused by the effects of changing temperatures on rocks, causing the rock to break apart.
BiologicalWeatheringbyChemical Compounds involves the changes in rocks due to the activities of certain plants and animals.
Chemical weathering by lichens involves the changes in rocks due to the activities of certain plants and animals.
Abrasion is a type of physical weathering that happens when a rock or sediments bump into another rock causing its breakdown.
Thermal and pressure change is a type of physical weathering that occurs when rocks crumble and break into fragments because they are subjected to alternating hot and cold temperature many times during the day.
Wind weathering is a type of physical weathering that occurs when wind erodes rocks and minerals.
Wave weathering is a type of physical weathering that occurs when waves erode rocks and minerals.
Freeze and thaw or frost wedging is a type of physical weathering that occurs when water expands when it freezes, creating cracks in rocks and causing them to break apart.
Chemical weathering is the breaking down of rocks and minerals caused by chemicals in rain or moving water, leading to rock’s change in chemical composition or weakening of its structure.
Hydration is a form of chemical weathering in which the chemical bonds of the mineral are changed as it interacts with water.
Hydrolysis takes place when acid rain reacts with rock-forming minerals such as feldspar to produce clay and salts that are removed in solution.
Hydration, on the other hand, is the linkage or mixing of molecules of water without cleavage the molecule of water in inorganic chemistry.