Title: Natural vs. Accelerated Soil Erosion
 1Natural vs. Accelerated Soil Erosion
- Natural geologic erosion has occurred at a 
 relatively slow rate since the earth was formed.
 Natural erosion produces about 30 of all
 sediment in the U. S.
- Accelerated erosion is the increased rate of 
 erosion caused primarily by the removal of
 vegetation or the alteration of ground contours.
 This type of erosion accounts for 70  of
 sediment in the country.
2The Three Processes of Soil Erosion
- Detachment 
- Transport 
- Deposition
3Erosion
- Erosion is the process in which, by the actions 
 of wind or water, soil particles are detached and
 transported.
4Detachment
Raindrop impact energy is enough to dislodge 
surface sediments. 
 5Transport
Detached soil particles are transported by the 
energy of water flowing over ground and in 
channels. Additionally, soil particles in 
fluid systems (like watercourses and ditches) may 
also detach unprotected soil particles by 
physical action. 
 6Sediment
- Sediment is eroded material suspended in wind or 
 water.
Sedimentation
Sedimentation is the deposition of eroded 
material. 
 7The Erosion Process 
 8Rill Erosion
As flow concentrates, small channels begin to 
form in the soil surface. 
 9Rill Erosion to Gully Erosion 
 10Gully Erosion
Gullies are formed when Runoff cuts rills deeper 
and wider or when flows from several rills come 
together and form a large channel. 
 11Slope Failure
Left unattended, erosion can cause catastrophic 
failure of roads or other facilities. 
 12What can accelerateerosion problems?
- Unrestricted development 
- Removal of surface cover 
- Increased imperviousness (i.e., paving) that 
 increases runoff
- Poor stewardship
13Construction-relatederosion can...
- Cause problems for down slope property owners 
- Create nuisance problems on adjacent streets 
- Clog streams and storm drains 
14Construction-relatederosion can...
- Result in turbidity plumes in downstream water 
 bodies
- Cover sensitive habitat areas with sediment 
15Pollutant Export During Construction
- Clearing and grading exposes soils 
- Eroded sediment can be transported 
- Also transports nutrients, pesticides, bacteria, 
 organic matter, and toxic substances
- Uncontrolled construction site sediment loads can 
 be 35 to 45 tons/acre/year
16In-stream Damages
- May include 
- destruction of spawning areas, food sources, 
 habitat
- direct toxicity to wildlife 
- lake degradation 
- filling of navigation channels 
- impacts to commercial fisheries 
- reduction of water storage capacities
17Suspended Material
Sediment can affect light penetration, channel 
stability, fisheries  habitat. 
 18Off-stream Damages
- May include 
- Increased flood hazards 
- Increased water treatment costs 
- Decreased capacity in conveyance facilities 
- Higher infrastructure maintenance costs 
19Before... 
 20and After 
 21Before... 
 22and After 
 23Questions