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8.4: Water, the Dissolver of Rocks

  • Page ID
    31640
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    We now return to the main topic of our chapter. In addition to moving water, precipitation and evaporation of water drive the movement of salts into the ocean. Precipitation delivers water to Earth’s surface, where it dissolves the soluble parts of rocks—a process called chemical weathering (discussed in Chapter 6). Once dissolved, the salts go where the water flows. Eventually, rivers, streams, and underground flows deliver those salts to the ocean. Over time, without processes to remove them, the salts build up.

    The best evidence that salts in the modern ocean originated from continental rocks comes from an analysis of their chemical composition. If we compare the elements in continental rocks, the dissolved elements in rivers, and the elements dissolved in seawater (i.e., the major constituents), we discover that they are virtually identical. Their concentrations vary, but their major constituents—Na, Cl, and others—are largely the same.

    Dissolved Substance

    Concentration (µM)

    Total

    Total flux 1012 mol yr-1

    Natural

    Human

    Cl

    162

    71

    233

    8.70

    Na+

    224

    89

    313

    11.71

    SO42-

    68

    52

    120

    4.48

    Mg2+

    138

    12

    150

    5.62

    Ca2+

    334

    33

    367

    13.72

    K+

    33

    2

    35

    1.31

    HCO3

    852

    17

    869

    32.49

    Source: Pilson 2013


    This page titled 8.4: Water, the Dissolver of Rocks is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by W. Sean Chamberlin, Nicki Shaw, and Martha Rich (Blue Planet Publishing) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.