General knowledge

Cards (55)

  • Weathering is the breaking down of material in situ
  • the three types of weathering are biological, chemical or freeze-thaw
  • biological weathering is caused by plants and animals
  • biological weathering is when rocks are broken down by plant roots or burrowing animals
  • chemical weathering is the breaking down of rocks caused by a chemical change within that rock, this is caused by salt water or acid rain
  • freeze-thaw weathering is cased by water entering cracks in a rock, freezing, expanding and breaking rocks apart
  • the physical geography of the UK is caused by geological, fluvial, glacial or tectonic processes
  • geological processes are rocks
  • fluvial is water
  • glacial is ice
  • tectonic os earthquakes and volcanoes
  • The UK is made of upland and lowland areas
  • Upland areas are found in the north and west, particularly in Scotland, Wales and north england
  • lowland areas are in the south of the UK and are found in norfolk and south of the imaginary line between Flamborough head and the bristol channel
  • glaciers are large masses of ice that move slowly downhill
  • upland regions of the UK like Snowdonia and the lake district used to be covered by glaciers explaining the U-shaped valleys and rocky geology
  • Igneous rocks are hard rocks formed by cooled magma that solidifies
  • igneous rocks are intrusive and form underground or are extrusive and form above ground
  • examples of igneous rocks are granite and basalt
  • Metamorphic rock are soft rocks that have been put under intense heat and pressure
  • examples of metamorphic rocks are marble from limestone, slate from clay and schist from shale
  • sedimentary rock is formed from sediment settled at the bottom of a lake, sea or ocean, compressed for millions of years
  • sedimentary rocks are softer, foliated and tend to create fossils
  • examples of sedimentary rocks are limestone, chalk, sandstone, shale, and mudstone
  • erosion is the wearing away of material
  • the types of erosion are abrasion, attrition, traction and hydraulic action
  • transportation is the movement of material
  • the types of transportation are saltation, traction, solution, suspension
  • deposition is the dropping of sediment
  • mass movement occurs through sliding and slumping
  • sliding is when rocks slide or roll down the cliff of at the coastline
  • slumping is when the cliff collapses ina rotational movement due to a high force from a heavy object on a soft rock cliff
  • a discordant coastline is when the the types of rock are perpendicular to the shoreline
  • a concordant coastline is where the type of rock is parallel to the shore;ine
  • on discordant coastlines, headlands and bays are formed due to differential erosion
  • differential erosion is when the rates of erosion a different due to different resistances
  • a headland slowly erodes to create an crack cave arch stack stump
  • the crack of a headland is created through weathering
  • a crack widens to create a cave
  • the back cave wall is eroded through by abrasion and hydrolic action to form an arch