Types of Physical & Chemical Weathering
Erosion & Deposition
Landforms & Florida Features
Earth’s Movers: Water, Wind, Ice, Gravity
Test-Style Earth’s Surface Scenarios
100

Rock breaks into smaller pieces, but the material stays the same.

What is physical (mechanical) weathering?

100

The process that moves broken rock from one place to another.

What is erosion?

100

A cone-shaped deposit formed where a river enters a slow-moving or still body of water.

What is a delta?

100

Which agent makes rocks smooth in rivers?

Water

100

A student finds small, smooth rocks along a lake shoreline.
What process MOST likely made them smooth?

What is being rolled and weathered by moving water? Abrasion 

200

Water freezes in cracks, expands, and breaks rock apart.

What is ice wedging (mechanical)?

200

The process where sediments being carried by water, wind, or ice are finally dropped.

What is deposition?

200

Florida is known for these landforms caused by chemical weathering of limestone underground.

What are sinkholes?

200

Which agent piles up sand into dunes?

Wind

200

A rock formation experiences hot days and very cold nights, causing the outer layers to peel like an onion.

What type of weathering is this?
 

What is temperature/thermal weathering (mechanical)? Ice wedging 

300

Rainwater dissolves limestone underground creating holes and caves.

What is chemical weathering?

300

Which agent of erosion would most likely move sand along a beach shoreline?

What is moving water / waves?

300

Wind can create this landform by depositing sand into a mound or ridge.

What is a sand dune?

300

Which agent carves U-shaped valleys?

Ice (glaciers).

300

A river flows faster on one side of the bend than the other.
Where will more erosion occur?

On the faster, outside curve of the river.

400

Tree roots grow into cracks, push rock apart, and break it.

What is root wedging (mechanical weathering)?

400

On a river bend, which side erodes faster—the inside or outside—and why?

What is the outside because water flows faster there?

400

Glacial erosion can carve out these bowl-shaped landforms high in mountain ranges.

What are cirques?

400

Which agent causes landslides?

Gravity

400

Students compare two beaches after a storm. 

-Beach A has mangrove roots, and 

-Beach B has no plants.
Which beach will show less erosion, and why?

Beach A, 

because plant roots trap sediment and slow erosion.

500

A metal statue rusts after years of exposure to air and water.

What is chemical weathering because metal reacts with oxygen?

500

A steep slope produces more erosion than a gentle slope. Explain why.

What is gravity pulls sediment downward faster on steeper slopes?

500

Compare Florida landforms to non-Florida landforms by naming one found in Florida and one that is NOT.

Florida: coastlines, dunes, aquifers, caverns, lakes, sinkholes
Not Florida: mountains, glaciers, volcanoes

500

Which agent can move boulders slowly downhill over many years?

Ice (glaciers)

500

Two rocks are placed in flowing water—one rough and one smooth.
After several weeks, the rough rock becomes smoother.
What process caused this?

Abrasion from moving water.

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