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Water%20Erosion:

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Water Erosion: How do processes involving water change Earth s surface? Part 1 * What is the MAJOR agent of erosion that has shaped Earth s land surface? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Water%20Erosion:


1
  • Water Erosion
  • How do processes involving water change Earths
    surface?
  • Part 1

2
  • What is the MAJOR agent of erosion that has
    shaped Earths land surface?
  • moving water

3
  • Water moving over lands surface is called
  • runoff.
  • Runoff may cause
  • sheet erosion.

4
  • The amount of
  • water runoff in an area depends on
  • 5 main factors

5
Factors that affect Runoff
  • The amount of rain an area receives.
  • More rain more runoff
  • Vegetation - grasses, shrubs trees reduce
    runoff.
  • More vegetationless runoff
  • Type of soil - some soils absorb more water than
    others
  • Shape of the land steep slopes have more
    run-off, which causes more erosion
  • How people use the land parking lots crop
    removal increase run-off.

6
  • Runoff overtime
  • How does runoff over time affect the land and
    water?

7
Rills Gullies
  • As runoff travels across the soil, rills form.
  • Rills are tiny grooves in the soil that grow
    larger forming gullies.
  • A gully is a large groove or channel in the soil
    that carries runoff after a storm. It moves soil
    rocks.
  • Gullies only contain water after it rains.

8
Streams Rivers
  • Gullies join together to form a larger channel
    called a stream.
  • Water continuously flows here and rarely dries
    up.
  • Small streams may be called creeks or brooks.
  • Small streams flow together to form a large
    stream called a river.

9
Rill, Gully, Stream
Rill erosion at a construction site. Image by M.
Mamo, Labels added by UNL
Stream
Gully erosion in a pasture. Image by NRCS
10
Tributaries
  • Streams grow together by getting water from
    tributaries.
  • A tributary is a stream or river that flows into
    a larger river.
  • Tributaries collect their water from the
    drainage basin or watershed.
  • An example The Missouri Ohio rivers are
    tributaries of the Mississippi river.

11
Rivers Tributaries
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12
  • Rivers
  • cause erosion and create valleys,
    waterfalls, flood plains, meanders and oxbow
    lakes.
  • form on steep mountain slopes.

13
  • How do they flow?
  • Quickly and follow a narrow path
  • How do they erode?
  • Rapidly
  • The result is that rivers form deep, V-shaped
    valleys.

14
Valleys
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15
Features of rivers What features are formed
by erosion along a river?
16
Waterfalls
  • Occur where?
  • Where a river meets an area of hard slowly
    eroding rock
  •  Then flows over softer rock downstream.
  •  How does softer rock erode?
  • The softer rock erodes away faster.
  • What results from this erosion?
  • A waterfall develops.

17
Waterfalls
Waterfalls at the Plitvicka Jezera National Park
in Croatia
Minnehaha Falls, Minneapolis Minnesota
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estate-inminnesota.com/images/Minneapolis.jpgimgr
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18
Flood Plain
  • What is a flood plain?
  • A wide valley in which a river flows
  • What happens to the land during a flood?
  • The water in the river over flows its banks into
    this wide river valley area.

19
Flood Plain
20
Meanders
  • What are meanders?
  • Loop-like bends in the course of a river.
  • Where how do they occur?
  • They occur as the outer bank of a river is
    eroded deposits are dropped on the inner bank
    of the bend in a river.

21
  • Example
  • The southern stretch of the Mississippi River
    meanders on a wide, gently sloping flood plain
    area.

22
Mississippi River Meanders
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23
Oxbow Lakes
  • What is an oxbow lake?
  • A meander that has been cut-off from the river.
  • They may form when a river floods as high water
    finds a straighter path downstream . As flood
    waters fall, sediments dam up the ends of the
    meander and a lake forms.

24
Oxbow Lakes
http//muller.lbl.gov/travel_photos/AmazonWebPages
/AmazonWebPages-Images/1.jpg
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