Erosion
Rocks breaking down into smaller pieces
Runoff
Water that moves over Earth’s surface
Causes sheet erosion
Moves downhill
Forms rills, gullies, streams, rivers, tributaries
When runoff flows in a thin layer it may cause sheet erosion
Amount of runoff depends on amount of rain, vegetation in area, type of soil, land shape, and how people use the land
Increases due to pavement, like parking lots because water cannot be absorbed into asphalt
Increases due to farming because vegetation (trees, shrubs) is cut down
Rills- tiny grooves in the soil
Gully- large groove or channel in the soil that carries runoff
Tributary-stream or river that flows into a larger river
Rivers
Erosion creates valleys, waterfalls, flood plains, meanders, oxbow lakes
Deposition creates alluvial fans, deltas, add soil to flood plain
Waterfalls wear down softer rock
Flood plain- flat, wide area of land around river, covered by water when river floods, in places like Egypt flood plains provide fertile soil for growing crops along big rivers like the Nile
Meander-looplike bend in a river, becomes more and more curved over time
Oxbow lake- meander that has been cut off from river, can form during flooding
alluvial fans- wide sloping deposit of sediment where a stream leaves a mountain range
deltas- sediment deposited when a river enters the ocean, example- Mississippi River creates a delta when it enters the Gulf of Mexico in New Orleans
Groundwater
Underground water
Chemical weathering-water sinks into the ground and combines with CO2 to form carbonic acid in a chemical reaction, breaks down limestone
Forms caves, stalactite (roof) and stalagmite (floor)
Glaciers
Continental glaciers-covers much of continent, island, like Greenland and Antarctica, ice age is when continental glaciers cover most of the Earth
Valley glaciers-long, narrow glacier from snow and ice in mountain valley, usually move down valleys that have been cut by rivers
Glaciers form when more snow falls than melts, snow and ice builds up
Plucking-picks up rocks as the glacier flows, can crush rocks, can move big boulders
Breaks rocks
Drags rocks which scratches bedrock, called abrasion
Deposits sediment when it melts- till, moraine, kettle
till- sediments and particles left by a glacier when it melts
Moraine- till deposited at edge of glacier, forms ridge, Long Island is a moraine
Kettle-
Waves
Energy comes from wind blown across water’s surface
Break apart rocks on shore
Abrasion-headland, arch, cave
Deposit sediment-beaches, spits, sandbars, barrier beaches
Wind
Deflation-wind removes surface materials, Dust Bowl
Abrasion-Polishes rock, little erosion
Deposits-sand dunes, loess-sediment that is finer than sand