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Weathering and erosion are both related, but they are distinct processes. Rocks are broken down and moved away from their original location by two processes called weathering and erosion. Erosion is the natural process that occurs on the Earth's crust's surface and Weathering is the process of degrading rocks, soils, and all other minerals, including synthetic minerals and wood.
The term "erosion" refers to the movement of solids (soil, rock, and other particles) downward or down-slope in reaction to gravity or by living creatures. Existing forces like wind, water, or ice are most frequently responsible for erosion. Erosion is a natural process that removes soil, rock, and material from the earth's surface as well as dissolves it, and carries it to another site. Erosive agents including water, ice, snow, air, plants, animals, and people are all engaged in the dynamic processes that can cause erosion. Erosion differs from weathering as it doesn't involve the movement of particles. You may prevent erosion using a variety of techniques, including planting vegetation, contour farming, avoiding overgrazing, reforestation, and the use of mulches.
There are four different forms of erosion: water, wind, ice, and gravity erosion.
To cultivate the land and feed the world's expanding population as well as to construct homes, industries, and other structures, humans have taken land from the forest. Deforestation refers to the removal of trees for these uses that are mentioned. The earth is kept together by the roots of trees, which prevents uprooting. The topsoil is damaged by wind and running water when extensive tracts of forest are destroyed.
The soil is at risk of erosion due to the development of buildings and roadways. For building purposes, the woods and grassland are destroyed due to which soil gets removed and makes it susceptible to erosion.
Ecosystems are frequently harmed by tourism and recreational activities, especially when there are more tourists than the ecosystem can handle in a particular place. At the most popular locations, visitors destroy the vegetation along trails, gradually resulting in wider sections of a surface free of vegetation. Trails that are used often get compacted, which results in less permeable soil and more surface runoff and causes erosion.
4. Logging and Mining
Several trees are chopped down to complete the logging process. Trees strongly retain the soil. The soil is shielded from heavy rains by the forest cover. During logging, the leaf litter that shields the soil from erosion is also removed. Mining is one of the industries that enabled the expansion of our economy, has severely terrified the world, and brutally destroyed several unique ecosystems. As a result of mining operations, the soil is additionally disturbed and more prone to erosion.
5. Overgrazing
When cattle are let to graze on the same field again, they consume every blade of grass, even the roots. This increases the topsoil's susceptibility to wind and water movement, which causes soil erosion. Moreover, while grazing the cattle also remove plants from the roots due to which the soil becomes more prone to erosion as a result of this loosening.
Due to the weathering the rocks, soils, minerals, wood, and manmade materials all deteriorate, which is the result of interaction with water, gases in the atmosphere, and living things. This procedure may go on for hundreds of years and be extremely slow. A case of rapid weathering involves damage to pathways or roadways after a cold, icy winter. Weathering, in contrast to erosion, is an in-situ process, meaning there is no movement, and it takes place in the same location as the source. One of the main causes of weathering is air pressure. The agents of weathering, lithological and structural aspects of rocks, variables affecting height and slope, and other factors all affect and control weathering. Other factors that have a stronger impact on various weathering processes include terrain, vegetation, and microfauna.
There are three types of weathering processes: physical, chemical, and biological.
| Basis of comparison | Erosion | Weathering |
|---|---|---|
| Definition | Erosion is a process that involves the movement of geological sources from one location to another as a result of surface activities like water flow. | Weathering is a geological process of breaking down resources like rocks and minerals as a result of interaction with the environment, water, or living things. |
| Causes | Ice, wind, water, and human activity. | Atmospheric conditions like air pressure. |
| Types | (1) Water erosion (2) Wind erosion (3) Ice erosion (4) Gravity erosion. | (1) Physical weathering (2) Chemical weathering (3) Biological weathering. |
| Displacement | Yes | No |
| Time period | Longer | Shorter |
| Movement | Eroded material moves. | Weathered material does not move. |
| Control | Planting Vegetation, Applying Mulches, and reforestation. | Wind barriers. |
Weathering and erosion, both processes are similar and also distinct in some terms. Erosion is the movement of solids (soil, rock, and other particles) downward or down-slope in reaction to gravity or by living creatures. 4 types of erosion are Wind, water, ice, and gravity erosion. Deforestation, overgrazing, Recreational activities, Construction, logging, and mining are the major causes of erosion. Weathering is a geological process of breaking down resources like rocks and minerals as a result of interaction with the environment, water, or living things. There are three types of weathering: Physical, chemical, and biological. Temperature, Pressure, frosting and thawing, and root wedging are the main causes of weathering. Both are distinct as weathering involves movement and erosion doesn't. And both processes include the loosening and crumbling of the dirt that is present on the surface.