by making a cloud we dont know were just 7th graders ;)
acids, air, water, oxidation, ground water, acid rain, and acid that comes from living things
Acidic rain causes chemical weathering to occur. Dissolution in particular.
Acidic rain causes chemical weathering to occur. Dissolution in particular.
Acid does indeed cause weathering. It is a common form of chemical weathering, and is sometimes influenced by humans. It is particularly devastating to basic rocks like limestone which neutralise the acid rain, but at the expense of its own volume, as after the neutralisation, the salt is often washed away and the limestone is consequently worn away.
Acid acts as a catalyst, causing water-releated weathering to happen more quickly. This is why acid rain is so potentially harmful. Pollutants in the air mix with water in rain giving the rain an acidic quality, which speeds up weathering.
Weathering of a statue can occur through mechanical weathering, which involves physical forces like wind and water breaking down the statue's surface, or chemical weathering, where chemical reactions deteriorate the statue's materials, such as acid rain causing erosion on the statue's surface.
Chemical weathering causes acid rain. When sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides are released into the atmosphere from human activities, they combine with water vapor to form sulfuric acid and nitric acid, which then fall to the earth's surface as acid rain.
Chemical weathering occurs through the processes of solution, hydration, carbonation and oxidation & reduction. Whichever process is followed there is a slight requiremnet of water for the weathering to occur. Because in chemical weathering, minerals in rocks disslove in either water and/or carbonic acid (weak acid, formed when water absorbs carbon dioxide). As a desert has less amount of moisture content, so it is slow in desert.
Chemical weathering is the process that forms carbonic acid in water. This occurs when carbon dioxide in the atmosphere dissolves in rainwater, forming a weak carbonic acid solution that can weather rocks over time.
Yes, carbonic acid in water is an example of chemical weathering. When carbon dioxide dissolves in rainwater, it forms carbonic acid, which can react with minerals in rocks, causing them to break down over time. This process is a common form of chemical weathering that contributes to the erosion and shaping of Earth's surface.
Mechanical weathering examples include frost wedging, where water seeps into cracks in rocks and freezes, expanding and breaking the rock. Chemical weathering examples include acid rain, where pollutants in the atmosphere react with water to form acidic precipitation that can erode rock surfaces over time.
Carbon Dioxide from the atmosphere combines with water to form carbonic acid, it is a form of acid rain.