Weathering and Soil Formation

Introduction

The Earth's SURFACE is constantly CHANGING. Rocks BREAK down, new SOIL forms, and landscapes are SHAPED over millions of years. WEATHERING is the process of BREAKING DOWN rocks into smaller pieces. The result of weathering is SOIL — the LAYER of loose material that SUPPORTS plant life.

1. Weathering — The Basics

TermDefinition
WeatheringBREAKING DOWN of rocks into smaller pieces IN PLACE (no movement)
ErosionTRANSPORT of weathered material by wind, water, or ice
DenudationWEATHERING + EROSION = wearing down of the Earth's surface
DepositionDROPPING of eroded material in a new location

Weathering vs Erosion

WeatheringErosion
Rock BREAKS in the same placeBroken material is CARRIED away
CAUSED by: temperature, rain, chemicals, plantsCAUSED by: wind, water, glaciers, gravity
NO movement involvedINVOLVES movement

2. Types of Weathering

A. Physical (Mechanical) Weathering

Physical weathering BREAKS rocks WITHOUT changing their chemical composition.

(i) Temperature Changes (Exfoliation / Onion Peeling)

  • In deserts, rocks HEAT up in the day (expand) and COOL at night (contract)
  • This REPEATED expansion and contraction causes OUTER layers to PEEL off
  • Result: SHEETING or EXFOLIATION — like peeling an ONION
  • Common in: DESERTS (large temperature difference between day and night)

(ii) Frost Action / Freeze-Thaw

  • Water ENTERS cracks in rocks
  • Water FREEZES and EXPANDS (by 9%)
  • This exerts PRESSURE — WIDENS the crack
  • Repeated freezing and thawing BREAKS the rock
  • Angular rock fragments form at the base of slopes — called SCREE or TALUS
  • Common in: HIGH MOUNTAINS and COLD regions

(iii) Pressure Release (Sheeting)

  • Rocks deep underground are under HUGE pressure from overlying rocks
  • When overlying rocks are REMOVED (by erosion), pressure is RELEASED
  • The rock EXPANDS and cracks PARALLEL to the surface
  • Common in: Areas where GLACIERS have retreated

B. Chemical Weathering

Chemical weathering CHANGES the chemical composition of rocks.

(i) Carbonation

  • RAINWATER absorbs CO2 from the air → becomes WEAK CARBONIC ACID
  • This acid DISSOLVES LIMESTONE and CHALK
  • Creates: CAVES, sinkholes, stalactites, stalagmites
  • Common in: LIMESTONE regions

(ii) Oxidation

  • OXYGEN in air and water REACTS with minerals (especially IRON)
  • Rocks TURN REDDISH or BROWNISH — like RUST
  • Common in: Areas with IRON-rich rocks

(iii) Solution

  • Minerals DISSOLVE directly in water
  • Salt (halite) dissolves EASILY
  • Common in: COASTAL areas, salt deposits

C. Biological Weathering

Living organisms BREAK down rocks.

(i) Plant roots

  • Tree roots GROW into cracks and WIDEN them
  • This is PHYSICAL biological weathering

(ii) Burrowing animals

  • Worms, ants, rodents DIG through soil and rock
  • Brings FRESH rock to the surface where weathering is faster

(iii) Lichens and moss

  • Produce ACIDS that DISSOLVE rock surfaces
  • This is CHEMICAL biological weathering

3. Soil Formation

What is Soil?

SOIL is the THIN upper layer of the Earth's crust where PLANTS grow. It is formed by WEATHERING of rocks over THOUSANDS of years.

Factors Affecting Soil Formation

FactorExplanation
Parent rockType of rock DETERMINES soil type (e.g., granite → sandy soil; basalt → black soil)
ClimateTemperature and rainfall AFFECT the rate of weathering
ReliefSTEEP slopes = THIN soil (erosion); FLAT areas = DEEP soil
VegetationPlant roots BREAK rocks; dead plants ADD organic matter
TimeIt takes HUNDREDS to THOUSANDS of years to form just 1 cm of soil
OrganismsWorms and microbes help DECOMPOSE organic matter

Soil Profile

A VERTICAL section through the soil showing DIFFERENT layers (HORIZONS):

HorizonNameDescription
O (Organic)Humus layerDEAD leaves, plants, organic matter (DARK colour)
A (Topsoil)Upper soilMIXED with humus; contains MINERALS; most FERTILE
B (Subsoil)Middle layerACCUMULATED minerals from above; LIGHTER colour
C (Weathered rock)RegolithPARTIALLY weathered rock; FRAGMENTS
R (Bedrock)Solid rockUNWEATHERED rock below all layers

Note: The O, A, B, C, R horizons are standard internationally. In ICSE, some textbooks use only A, B, C.

4. Types of Soil in India

Soil TypeRegionCharacteristics
ALLUVIAL soilNorthern plains (Ganga-Brahmaputra)MOST FERTILE; deposited by rivers; rich in potash
BLACK soil (Regur)Deccan Plateau (Maharashtra, Gujarat, MP)CLAYEY; holds moisture; ideal for COTTON
RED soilTamil Nadu, Karnataka, AndhraRICH in iron; POOR in nitrogen and phosphorus
LATERITE soilWestern Ghats, NE IndiaLEACHED by heavy rain; RICH in iron/aluminium
DESERT soilRajasthan, Gujarat SANDY; low moisture; needs IRRIGATION
MOUNTAIN soilHimalayasVARIED depending on altitude and vegetation

5. Soil Erosion

What is Soil Erosion?

REMOVAL of the TOP LAYER of soil by natural forces — ESPECIALLY by water and wind.

Causes of Soil Erosion

CauseExplanation
DeforestationTrees PROTECT soil; without them, rain washes soil away
OvergrazingAnimals REMOVE grass cover; soil becomes loose
Intensive farmingContinuous cultivation DEPLETES soil
WindIn DRY areas, wind BLOWS away topsoil
WaterRAIN and RUNNING water carry soil away
ConstructionBUILDING removes vegetation and exposes soil

Types of Soil Erosion

TypeDescription
Sheet erosionTHIN layer of soil removed evenly over a large area
Rill erosionSMALL channels (rills) form on slopes
Gully erosionRills ENLARGE into deep GULLIES — BADLANDS form
Wind erosionWind LIFTS and BLOWS away loose soil (dust storms)

6. Soil Conservation

Methods

MethodHow It Works
AfforestationPLANT trees — roots HOLD soil
Contour ploughingPlough ALONG the contour lines (not up/down slope)
Terrace farmingFLAT steps on slopes — REDUCES runoff
Shelter beltsLines of trees REDUCE wind speed
Crop rotationChanging crops MAINTAINS soil fertility
Cover cropsGROWING grass between crop seasons PROTECTS soil
MulchingCOVERING soil with organic matter
Ban on shifting cultivationPreventing SLASH-AND-BURN agriculture

ICSE Exam Focus

2-mark questions

  • What is WEATHERING?
  • Name THREE types of weathering.
  • What is SOIL PROFILE?

4-mark questions

  • Differentiate between PHYSICAL and CHEMICAL weathering with examples.
  • Explain the FACTORS affecting SOIL FORMATION.
  • Describe the METHODS of SOIL CONSERVATION.

6-mark (essay) questions

  • Discuss the TYPES and CAUSES of WEATHERING with examples.
  • Describe the SOIL PROFILE and explain the IMPORTANCE of soil conservation.

Self-Test

  1. What is the DIFFERENCE between weathering and erosion? Answer: Weathering is the BREAKING DOWN of rocks IN PLACE (without movement). Erosion is the TRANSPORT OF weathered material by wind, water, or ice.

  2. How does FREEZE-THAW weathering work? Answer: Water enters cracks in rocks. When it FREEZES, it EXPANDS by 9%. This exerts PRESSURE on the crack walls. Repeated freezing and thawing breaks the rock into pieces (scree/talus).

  3. What are the FIVE soil horizons in a soil profile? Answer: O (organic/humus), A (topsoil), B (subsoil), C (weathered rock/regolith), R (bedrock). Each layer has DIFFERENT properties.

  4. Which soil type is BEST for cotton cultivation? Where is it found? Answer: BLACK soil (Regur) is best for cotton. It is found in the DECCAN PLATEAU — especially Maharashtra, Gujarat, and Madhya Pradesh.

  5. Name THREE methods of SOIL CONSERVATION. Answer: Contour ploughing (ploughing along contours), terrace farming (steps on slopes), afforestation (planting trees), shelter belts, crop rotation, mulching.

  6. What is EXFOLIATION? Where does it commonly occur? Answer: Exfoliation is a type of physical weathering where OUTER LAYERS of rock PEEL OFF like an onion. It occurs in DESERTS where large daily temperature changes cause expansion and contraction.

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