Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Fluvial Landforms
- Erosional
- V-shaped Valleys
- Depends on 3 factors:
Climate, geology and
vegetation
- Consequently forms interlocking spurs
- Usually form upstream
in steep sided valleys
- Rapids
- Forms where there is a sudden increase in
the slope of the channel, or where a river
flows over a series of harder bands of rock
- Turbulence further erodes the soft rock between
hard rock bands and exaggerates the rapids
- Waterfall
- Rapid changes in the gradient of the river
cause waterfalls
- Most commonly form where the river flows over a band
of harder rock and then falls onto a softer rock, thus
eroding faster through the softer layer.
- Depositional
- Floodplains
- When a river's maximum water capacity is overcome it
floods and the excess water flows onto surrounding land.
- When this floodwater receeds it deposits it's load
which increase the height and fertility of the land
- As more floods occur over time the
alluvium builds up wide, flat plains either
side of the river - this are the floodplains
- Levees
- During flooding the larger load is deposited first,
this builds up the river sides and creates natural
embankments, or levees
- Over time this material builds up and acts as a
natural flood defence
- Braiding
- When a river slows and material is deposited it can
build up in certain areas, this goes on over time until
the river has developed small islands within it's channel
- As the river flows around these
landforms it looks similar to
braided hair, hence the name
- Deltas
- As a river slows near a body of still water it deposits much of its load, this
material builds up in the river channel until it forces the existing water out
- This water then begins eroding new channels
and overtime the process repeats many times.
- Eventually the distinctive delta form appears
as the river splits into many distributaries as it
has neared the body of still water.
- The 4 main delta types are: cuspate (singular
channel), arcuate (deposition dome), bird's foot
(deposition following the channels out), and estuarine
(deposition either side of the single inland channel)
- Meanders
- As a river undergoes more lateral erosion
downstream and experiences turbulence in the river
channel it begins to bend the river into curves
- These bends, over time, are eroded more and more
until they become prominent land features
- Oxbow Lakes
- The resulting landform when a river cuts
through the neck of the meander and
blocks off the previous meander bend
- Rejuvenation is the process by
which the river attempts to
maintain an even, graded long profile
- As the channel gradient
changes downstream these
erosion features will form to
revert it to its most efficient
grade
- The points at which the profile experiences
dramatic drops, or rises, are called knickpoints
- The river's profile changes because of
two factors: isostatic change (the land
rising relative to the sea), or eustatic
change (the sea level falling)