QUIET FORCES THAT DESTROY ROCKS
Wind and water are the blustering active agents we see at work tearing down rocks and carrying away their particles. They do the most of this work of levelling the land; but there are quiet forces at work which might not attract our attention at all, and yet, without their help, wind and running water would not accomplish half the work for which they take the credit.
The air contains certain destructive gases which by their chemical action separate the particles of the hardest rocks, causing them to crumble. Now the wind blows away these crumbling particles, and the solid unchanged rock beneath is again exposed to the crumbling agencies.
The changes in temperature between day and night cause rocks to contract and expand, and these changes put a strain upon the mineral particles that compose them. Much scaling of rock surfaces is due to these causes. Building a fire on top of a rock, and then dashing water upon the heated mass, shatters it in many directions. This process merely intensifies the effect produced by the mild changes of winter and summer. Water is present in most rocks, in surprising quantities, often filling the spaces in porous rocks like sandstones.
When winter brings the temperature down to the freezing point, the water near the surface of the rock first feels it. Ice forms, and every particle of water is swollen by the change. A strain is put upon the mineral particles against which the particles of ice crowd for more room. Frost is a very powerful agent in the crumbling of rocks, as well as of stubborn clods of earth. In warm climates, and in desert regions where there is little moisture in the rocks, this destructive action of freezing water is not known. In cold countries, and in high altitudes, where the air is heavy with moisture, its greatest work is done.
Some kinds of rock decay when they become dry, and resist crumbling better when they absorb a certain amount of moisture. Alternate wetting and drying is destructive to certain rocks.
One of the unnoticed agents of rock decay is the action of lowly plants. Mosses grow upon the faces of rocks, thrusting their tiny root processes into pits they dig deeper by means of acids secreted by the delicate tips. You have seen shaded green patches of lichens, like little rugs, of different shapes, spread on the surface of rocks. But you cannot see so well the work these growths are doing in etching away the surface, and feeding upon the decaying mineral substance.
Mosses and lichens do a mighty work, with the help of water, in reducing rocks to their original elements, and thus forming soil. No plants but lichens and mosses can grow on the bare faces of rocks. As their root-like processes lengthen and go deeper into the rock face, particles are pried off, and the under-substance is attacked. Higher plants then find a footing. Have you not seen little trees growing on a patch of moss which gets its food from the air and the rock to which it clings? The spongy moss cushion soaks up the rain and holds it against the rock face. A streak of iron in the rock may cause the water to follow and rust it out, leaving a distinct crevice. Now the roots of any plant that happens to be growing on the moss may find a foot-hold in the crack. Streaks of lime in a rock readily absorb water, which gradually dissolves and absorbs its particles, inviting the roots to enter these new passages and feed upon the disintegrating minerals. Dead leaves decay, and the acids the trickling water absorbs from them are especially active in disintegrating lime rocks.
From such small beginnings has resulted the shattering of great rock masses by the growth of plants upon them. Tree roots that grow in rock crevices exert a power that is irresistible. The roots of smaller plants do the same great work in a quieter way.