材料音频

Listen to part of a lecture in a geology class.
Ok. Before we begin I want to remind you that our field trip to Bryce canyon national park is this
weekend. Remember the bus leaves early five am , so don’t forget to set your alarm clocks. I
think you’re all gonna enjoy getting out of the classroom and actually seeing some remarkable
geologic phenomena. Now. while we’re there. I want you to pay particular attention to two things.
One obviously will be the sediment layers making up the rocks, since we’ve spent so much time
on sedimentary rocks. Bryce canyon is a great place to see how millions of years have turned
layers and layers of tightly packed sediment. mud particles sand remains of plants and animals
into rock. But you’re also gonna see some fascinating rock shapes, formations that are the result
of the weathering and the erosion processes that occur at Bryce canyon.
There are two main processes that are important. The first one is a weathering process called frost
wedge. Frost wedge a process that widens cracks in rocks in the wintertime. It begins with warm
air or daytime sun melting the snow. As the snow turns into water, it seeps into the cracks that
occur naturally in sedimentary rocks. At night. this water freezes in the cracks. but when water
freezes, it expands quite a bit, which means that it prize cracks open gradually. making them
wider and breaking off a little bits in the process. Now, this thought freeze cycle can happen as
many as two hundred times in a single year. So that makes it the most important weathering
process at Bryce canyon.
The other key processes is runoff, which is an erosion process. Runoff takes place in the summer.
The parks in the desert said the grounds very dry. When it rains in late summer. the ground is too
hard to absorb the water, so it runs off. And as it runs off, it carries away the gravel, the broken
bits of rock created by cross wedge in the winter. So runoff is the main erosion process that alters
the rock landscape in the park. And because these processes have occurred over thousands of
years. some of the results can be pretty dramatic, like the giant corridors are passage ways that
have developed within the rocks. These passage ways are known as slot canyons.
Here’s an example of one. not from the part we’re going to. This one is actually in Australia. but
the scale is typical. So these huge spaces started out as small cracks throughout the sedimentary
rock. then thanks to millions of cycles across wedge and runoff. What used to be one big area of
rock is now sort of two smaller areas of brought with the corridor in between. We’ll have a
chance to walk through some like this. These slot canyons are great places to explore. but let me
just say, for any of you who aren’t from around here, if you ever go on your own. make sure you
check a weather forecast first. A sudden heavy rain can cause a flash flood in a slot canyon. So
you want to know’ when it’s safe to explore them. Unfortunately. It’ll be dry this weekend. Now,
these deep, narrow slots are pretty common. You might even have two of them very close to each
other with only a thin va1l of rock in between. Of course. frost wedge is still at works so it starts
wearing away at the front of the thin wall until you get a whole I mean a hole all the way through
the wall. front to back. And this hole gets bigger and bigger. Once it’s at least one meter in
diameter, it’s called a window. And eventually the weight on top of it is just too much, so the
roof caves in and only the sides, sometimes it’s just one side is left standing. These sides, which
look a lot like collins, now are called Hudos. Here’s a photo of something we’ll be seeing. One of
the things that makes Bryce canyon unique is that it has more Hudos than anywhere else in the
world.
Yes, Margot?
F: Why is it so lumpy looking’? You’d think it would be smoother
.
M: Well. remember, these are sedimentary rocks, so they have layers. Some layers are mostly
limestone, and limestone erodes pretty quickly in the presence of any kind of acid. Now Bryce
canyon in a very unpolluted area. but even there. the rain water has a little carbonic acid in it,
which causes the limestone to erode. But other layers are made up of different types of sediment.
which aren’t so vulnerable to acid, so they don’t erode as quickly.
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