Rivers & Coasts: Formations

Descrição

GCSE Geography Mapa Mental sobre Rivers & Coasts: Formations, criado por Blerta Morina em 06-04-2019.
Blerta Morina
Mapa Mental por Blerta Morina, atualizado more than 1 year ago
Blerta Morina
Criado por Blerta Morina mais de 5 anos atrás
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Resumo de Recurso

Rivers & Coasts: Formations
  1. Waterfalls & Gorges
    1. They form where a river flows over an area of hard rock followed by an area of soft rock. The soft rock is eroded (by hydraulic action and abrasion) more than the hard rock, creating a step in the river. As water goes over the step, the soft rock is eroded more and more and eventually, a steep drop is made (a waterfall). The hard rock is undercut by erosion and becomes unsupported and collapses. The collapsed rocks are swirled around at the bottom of the waterfall where they erode the soft rock (by abrasion), creating a plunge pool. Over time, more undercutting causes more collapses and the waterfall will move back up the channel, leaving behind a gorge.
    2. Meanders & Oxbow Lakes
      1. Rivers tend to be straight in the beginning. An obstacle in the river may cause the river to divert to one side. This causes erosion to one side of the river, which leads to a further S-shaped motion of the river, causing further erosion downstream and a curved river channel.
        1. Over time, the neck of the meander will narrow due to the erosion and the two outside bends may eventually meet. The river will take the new straighter, shorter course, which makes the oxbow lake cut off.
        2. Deposition
          1. The river floods so it bursts its banks and so there is a loss of energy. This means that the river can no longer carry the material it was transporting and so deposition occurs and the largest material is left behind first. This material is the reason it begins to build up the banks at the side. This happens a number of times and there is a build-up of layers of material and so the levels get bigger and more apparent and formed.
          2. Interlocking Spurs
            1. Upper course. Rivers aren't powerful enough to erode laterally, so they wind around the hillsides that stick out into their paths on either side. The hillsides that interlock with each other, as the river winds around them are interlocking spurs.
            2. Levees
              1. Natural embankments along the river channel. During a flood, eroded material is deposited over the whole floodplain. The heaviest material is deposited closes to the channel so, over time, the deposited material is builds up, creating levees along the edges of the channel.

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