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Erosion and Deposition Vocab to know… • Erosion – the process by which weathered rock and soil particles are moved from one place to another. Can be caused by gravity, wind, running water, glaciers, and waves. • Deposition – the process by which sediments are laid down in new locations. • Gravity – pulls rocks and soil down slopes. This is called mass wasting. Can be fast or slow. The sediments come to rest at the bottom forming a talus. Erosion Causes • 1. gravity • 2. wind • 3. running water • 4. glaciers • 5. waves Each of these will be discussed, you need to know all five of them…………. 1. Gravity • This is called mass wasting • Sediments that come to rest are called talus • Rapid mass wasting is landslides, mudflows, and slumps • Slow mass wasting can be earth flows and soil creep Mass wasting type 1. • Landslide – rapid, caused by an earthquake, a volcanic eruption, or the weakening of rocks due to heavy rain. Has the ability to move millions of tons at once. Mass Wasting type 2 • Mudflow – rapid, caused by heavy rain, the mud moves downhill picking up more soil and becomes thicker. Can move anything in its path. Mudflow pic Mass Wasting type 3 • Slump – when a block of rock or soil on the face of a slope slips down so that its upper surface is tilted backwards. Mass Wasting type 4 • Earth flow – slow, caused by heavy rains, where a mass of soil and plant life slowly slides down a slope. Mass Wasting type 5 • Soil creep – slowest, caused by alternating periods of freezing and thawing, animal activity, or water movement. Particles move slowly downhill. Soil Creep pic 2. Wind • Wind – the most active agent of erosion in deserts, in plowed fields, and on beaches. • Types of wind erosion – Deflation – fine particles are carried high up into the air. – Abrasion – larger particles roll or bounce along the ground. Wind continued… • The amount of erosion is dependent on size of the particles, the speed of the wind, the length of time the wind blows, and the resistance of the rocks. • An oasis forms when the wind erodes the desert until it reaches the depth where water is present allowing grass and trees to grow. • Sand dunes – a mound of sand deposited by wind. They protect the area on the side of the dune away from the ocean from further erosion. Small plants often grow here. Can vary in size and shape: the side facing the wind has a gentle slope (windward side), the top (crest), and the other side (slip face) and is very steep. Dune Formation Wind continued • Loess is very fine particles of sand and silt not deposited in dunes, instead it is blown away from where it originates • Loess deposits are very fertile All we are is dust in the wind. Now, let us continue…………. 3. Running Water • Running water – the major cause of erosion. • Rain can: – Evaporate – Sink into the ground – Flow over the land as runoff As runoff, it carries particles of clay, sand, and gravel, Gravity pulls it downhill: water and sediment cut into soil forming tiny grooves called rills. • As erosion continues, rills grow wider and deeper. Eventually tiny stream valleys called gullies form, which act as channels for runoff. • Example: on the side of many roads in southern Virginia Beach. 3 factors affecting runoff amount • 1. Amount of rainfall • 2. Amount of plant growth in an area • 3. The shape of the land: steep slopes = more runoff because it moves too fast to soak into the ground. Streams and Erosion • When several gullies come together, a large stream form. The particles and rocks being carried form a load. • Large – rolls along bottom. • Small- flows with water. • Salt – some is dissolved and some is carried. River System develops • The network of rills, gullies, streams, and rivers in an area is called a drainage system. • Large streams are called tributaries, which flow into the main river. • The area drained by a main river and its channels is called a drainage basin. Life Cycle of a River • Immature river is Vshaped, its waters flow very quickly, waterfalls are common Mature River • One that has been forming for thousands of years, erosion has changed the valley to more of a U-shape, river has slowed down, waterfalls are mostly gone. • River’s course is curvy and winding, forming meanders River Formations • Oxbow lakes are formed when the water supply to a meander is cut off • Alluvial fans occur when the sediments that a river carries are dropped forming a fan shape • Deltas are formed at the mouth of a river when sediments are dropped Flood Plains and Levees Flood plains are the sediments that the river has deposited through time, they are very fertile Levees are the build up of the larger particles of sediment along the sides of the river’s flood plain • The land that separates basins is called a divide. • The Continental Divide is 80 km west of Denver, CO. Runs north and south the length of N. America. • West of divide flows into Pacific Ocean. • East of divide flows into Atlantic Ocean. • Divides get narrower with time and can cut through and share water from basins. The Divide Continental Divide More great erosion pics!!! Cave Humor! Karst topography • Cavern – used to describe a very large cave. • Speleology – the study of caves. • Spelunking – the hobby of exploring caves. • Caves and sinkholes are formed by the dissolving action of running water mixed with carbonic acid in rocks such as limestone, gypsum, and travertine. Sinkhole Pictures SINKHOLES COMMONLY HAVE PONDS IN THE MIDDLE WHEN IT REACHES GROUND WATER. Cave terminology • Speleothems are the mineral formations and deposits in caves. • Stalactites – icicle like, from the ceiling down, calcite deposits. • Stalagmites – calcite deposits, built up pillars from the floor. • If the two join a column is formed. Cave life • Permanent cave dwellers include fish, salamanders, crayfish, insects, spiders, and bats. • Animals like bears, lions, foxes, and wildcats use caves for hibernation or shelters. • Animals that live there permanently are usually partially or completely blind. Have a keen sense of smell and touch. Usually pale in color. Most of these animals are modified for cave life. Cave Life Erosion humor… 4. Glaciers Glaciers • Glacier – a large mass of moving ice and snow. Forms where there are many large snowfalls and the temp remains very cold. • Glacial ice erodes by abrasion and by plucking away at the rock beneath it. One of the most powerful agents of erosion. • May carry large boulders as well as smaller particles of rock. Deposits by Glaciers • Till – rocks and soil deposited directly by a glacier. Particles vary in size from large boulders to fine clay. Not sorted at all. • Moraines – formed with a glacier melts and retreats leaving a ridge of till. – Terminal moraine – deposited at the front end of a glacier. – Lateral moraine – till deposited along the sides of a glacier. Terminal and Lateral Moraines Glacier deposits continued… • Drumlins – an ovalshaped mound of till. Its tip points in the direction the glacier was moving. • Meltwater – streams formed by melting ice. • Outwash plains – sediments deposited by rivers of meltwater; fanshaped; usually in front of terminal moraines, fertile land. Uses for glacier deposits Still more… • Iceberg deposits – when parts of the glaciers break off and drift into the sea. • Glacial lakes – when the holes left by glaciers fill with water. Examples: The Great Lakes of Michigan, The Finger Lakes in New York. • Kettle lakes – when a huge block of glacial ice is left behind and melts to form a deep round hole that fills with the water from melting. The Great Lakes LAKE HURON Iceberg pics Icebergs Beach Property? 5. Wave Erosion • The powerful force of waves constantly erodes and shapes the shoreline. • Under normal conditions, waves erode about 1 to 1.5 meters per year. During storms it is increased and can erode up to 25 meters per day. Wave Erosion cont. • Sea cliffs- a steep face of rock . • Terrace – when a sea cliff is erodes and a buildup or rocks and sand form a flat platform. • Sea stack – a column of resistant rock left standing. • Sea cave – when wave action erodes rock and forms a cave. Sand bar and a Spit Sand bar WHAT IS THE NAME OF THE LOCAL SPIT? Spit Shape of the Shoreline • Shape of the shoreline - often results from changes in the sea level. If it suddenly drops then there will be many sea cliffs and terraces; if it rises then there will be many bays and harbors. Had enough yet?