What did you obsever from the videos and explain how they are relative to weathering. What type(s) of weather do the video remind you of and how? Elaborate on other types of agents that decompose rock.
Videos Water and Acid
-On the water video is looks as if water is being pressed through a self made tunnel, and dirt was mixed into the water and made a special rock. -On the acid video sedimentary rock is being formed over by a substance that is bubbly. Weathering has something to do with both , both are affected chemically not physically . Both remind me of Chemical weathering.
In the video about water I observed that the brown rock like container, that the water was placed in was caved inward. It also had ben worn away over the years by mechanical weathering. The agents that made that rock decompose were water and gravity. The container had a crack in the bottom from the weathering, which cause the water to drip out. In the video about acid I observed the acid start to eat away at the limesstone. This would probably be considered chemical weathering by carbonic acid.
One of video contains a rock that displays carbonic acid.Chemical weather reminds me of the videos. Wind, glacier, and water weather rock by crashing into it. Abrasion and gravity is weathering because they use rocks to erode other rocks. Organic is when plants and/or animals pierce through rock.
In the water video the water was dripping off of the object causing it to weather slowly because it was taking some of the object's loose material with it. In the acid video the Limestone was just being desintigrated by the vinegar. The water video is an example of Mechanical weathering and the acid video is an example of Chemical weathering.
I observed from the video a sedimentary rock that was like boiling. It was an acid I think. I didn't reallyunderstand the water video. It just looked like a big dirt bowl with water dripping out of it.
I observed that many agents can cause rocks to change their chemical composition, as well as their appearance. The first video about water was a kind of chemical weathering. The carbon dioxide in the air reacts with water and form carbonic acid. This means that when this acid comes in contact with a rock or soil, the rock or soil dissolves slowly. Overtime, the soil gets pushed under, which is almost similar to how stalactites form. The second video is about acid or vinegar and how it affects a rock. The acid makes a rock have a chemical change, which is the result of the fizzing. I think that the vinegar melts or dissolves the water slowly.
In the video on acid i observed wheathering. This is an example of weathering because weathering is the breaking down of minerals.The type of weathering i think it is is chemical weathering. And when the rock was in the acid, it started to dissolve.
In the water video the water was dripping off of the object causing it to weather slowly because it was taking some of the object's loose material with it. which is an example of weathering.
From the first video, i observed was the water dripping from the limestone filter to a plastic bottle. The second video, i observed was a pan fill whit liquid such as vinegar which made it bubble up. It shows how the videos are relative to weathering by how the liquids were breaking up. i think there's chemical weathering occurring because water is going between rock into a bottle.
-On the water video is looks as if water is being pressed through a self made tunnel, and dirt was mixed into the water and made a special rock.
ReplyDelete-On the acid video sedimentary rock is being formed over by a substance that is bubbly. Weathering has something to do with both , both are affected chemically not physically . Both remind me of Chemical weathering.
In the video about water I observed that the brown rock like container, that the water was placed in was caved inward. It also had ben worn away over the years by mechanical weathering. The agents that made that rock decompose were water and gravity. The container had a crack in the bottom from the weathering, which cause the water to drip out. In the video about acid I observed the acid start to eat away at the limesstone. This would probably be considered chemical weathering by carbonic acid.
ReplyDeleteOne of video contains a rock that displays carbonic acid.Chemical weather reminds me of the videos. Wind, glacier, and water weather rock by crashing into it. Abrasion and gravity is weathering because they use rocks to erode other rocks. Organic is when plants and/or animals pierce through rock.
ReplyDeleteIn the water video the water was dripping off of the object causing it to weather slowly because it was taking some of the object's loose material with it. In the acid video the Limestone was just being desintigrated by the vinegar. The water video is an example of Mechanical weathering and the acid video is an example of Chemical weathering.
ReplyDeleteI observed from the video a sedimentary rock that was like boiling. It was an acid I think. I didn't reallyunderstand the water video. It just looked like a big dirt bowl with water dripping out of it.
ReplyDeleteI observed that many agents can cause rocks to change their chemical composition, as well as their appearance. The first video about water was a kind of chemical weathering. The carbon dioxide in the air reacts with water and form carbonic acid. This means that when this acid comes in contact with a rock or soil, the rock or soil dissolves slowly. Overtime, the soil gets pushed under, which is almost similar to how stalactites form. The second video is about acid or vinegar and how it affects a rock. The acid makes a rock have a chemical change, which is the result of the fizzing. I think that the vinegar melts or dissolves the water slowly.
ReplyDeleteIn the video on acid i observed wheathering. This is an example of weathering because weathering is the breaking down of minerals.The type of weathering i think it is is chemical weathering. And when the rock was in the acid, it started to dissolve.
ReplyDeleteIn the water video the water was dripping off of the object causing it to weather slowly because it was taking some of the object's loose material with it. which is an example of weathering.
ReplyDeleteFrom the first video, i observed was the water dripping from the limestone filter to a plastic bottle. The second video, i observed was a pan fill whit liquid such as vinegar which made it bubble up. It shows how the videos are relative to weathering by how the liquids were breaking up. i think there's chemical weathering occurring because water is going between rock into a bottle.
ReplyDeletei observed in the vidoe that the it was a chemical weathering that react to the air that cause the the soil to dissolve away easily
ReplyDelete