What do exogenic processes refer to? What primarily drives exogenic forces? What is denudation in the context of exogenic processes? Which of the following is NOT a key agent of ex... What do exogenic processes refer to? What primarily drives exogenic forces? What is denudation in the context of exogenic processes? Which of the following is NOT a key agent of exogenic processes? What is the definition of weathering? Which type of weathering breaks rocks into smaller pieces without changing their mineral composition? What is an example of physical weathering? Which process involves the transformation of minerals due to reactions with water and gases? What is mass movement? Which of the following is a type of slow mass movement? What characterizes a mud flow? What is a landslide? What is erosion? Which type of erosion is influenced by rainfall intensity and soil type? What is gully erosion? What occurs during deposition?

Understand the Problem

The question is asking for the definitions and characteristics of exogenic processes, weathering, mass movement, erosion, and deposition, along with examples and explanations for each term. It seems to be a series of multiple-choice questions related to geology, specifically the processes affecting the Earth’s surface.

Answer

Exogenic processes occur on Earth's surface, driven by solar energy and gravity. They include weathering, mass wasting, erosion, and deposition.

Exogenic processes are external processes that occur on Earth's surface like weathering, mass wasting, erosion, and deposition. They are driven primarily by solar energy and gravity. Weathering, a type of exogenic process, includes physical weathering which breaks rocks without altering their composition. Deposition is the settling of transported materials.

Answer for screen readers

Exogenic processes are external processes that occur on Earth's surface like weathering, mass wasting, erosion, and deposition. They are driven primarily by solar energy and gravity. Weathering, a type of exogenic process, includes physical weathering which breaks rocks without altering their composition. Deposition is the settling of transported materials.

More Information

Exogenic forces include weathering, which breaks down rocks through processes like physical weathering, erosion, and deposition of materials. The primary drivers are the sun and gravity.

Tips

A common mistake is confusing exogenic with endogenic processes, which are internal and driven by Earth's internal energy.

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