The lower course of the river LO: I can describe and explain he formation of ox bow lakes. I can describe and explain he formation of flood plains. I can.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Earthshapes Unit RIVERS Vincent Raeburn Linlithgow Academy
Advertisements

Meanders Lesson 8 – page 7.
The Middle and Lower Course of a River
Rivers: Profiles & Landforms
Rivers.
Another Important Abiotic Factor
Another Important Abiotic Factor
Rivers Location Profiles Processes Landforms.
The River Course Features of the Upper Course Potholes Waterfalls
River landscapes and processes
The Global Hydrological Cycle
The Water Cycle.
Stages of a River Stage:Upper Course 1. Source 2. Waterfall
Downstream portion of river: landforms
Rivers are formed by erosion due to Running Water.
By the end of the lesson I should know:
OS map skills for rivers
WHAT CAN YOU REMEMBER? ocean land 2) _________ 3) _________
Transportation TRACTION SALTATION SUSPENSION SOLUTION
Past Paper Questions Feedback. What is meant by term ‘MAGNITUDE’ of a flood?  Size of flood  Volume of water discharged.
Chapter 14 River Systems and Landforms
Part 6 CLASSIC FLOOD PLAINS. FLOOD PLAINS Flood plains are those alluvial valleys that are periodically subject to inundation by flooding of a natural.
Landforms in the Lower Course
Middle River Stage: River landforms in Lowland Area.
3. River Profiles and Processes
The Physical World Revision Notes.
LQ: Can you explain the journey of a river from source to mouth?
Running water: The major force of erosion acting on Earth today. If it weren’t for the mountain- building activity of plate tectonics, Earth would be completely.
What landforms and features are associated with the middle course of a river? LO: To investigate how meanders and ox-bow lakes.
Streams (Rivers). Runoff: H 2 0 that does not sink into ground Most ends up in streams.
Hydrosphere Revision. Hydrosphere Questions Most commonly asked questions, every 2 years on average, are those related to OS maps and those which ask.
Rivers.
What is the long river profile? The gradient is less steep than in the upper course. The valley gets wider and flatter. Erosion is more lateral (or.
Rivers: a revision session. River facts River landforms are formed by erosion, transportation and deposition The main processes of river erosion are:
What are the human and physical causes of floods?
PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY GEOMORPHOLOGY SECTION RIVERS UNIT Geomorphology and Basin characteristics.
Study Guide Chapter 17 1.Know and use the simple equation for discharge. Why is this equation important? 2.What is the gradient of a stream? 3.Describe.
1 Lesley Monk Balfron High School Session 2005/6 HYDROSPHERE3.
“Hurricane force winds batter the UK. “ (bbc, 12 feb) Why is this not a hurricane though?
(,rivers, brooks, creeks, etc.)
LO: To describe and explain the processes that occur along the course of a river. To outline the key changes in characteristics along the course of a river.
1. TarmacConcreteGrass 2. Planting trees Dam building Heavy Rain 3. LakeVegetationDeforestation 4. Evaporation Condensation Urbanisation.
Verbal Warning (1 st ) Second warning get moved seat (de- merit) Removed from class for the lesson Referred to PT (Possible removal from class for a longer.
TRANSPORTATION & DEPOSITION in a Stream System.
Erosional and depositional river landscapes LS: Apply knowledge of Erosional processes to understand how erosion forms river landscapes. Describe the formation.
LOOKING AT RIVERS ON AN O.S. MAP. You may be asked to describe the physical features of a river an an OS map. The following points should be referred.
Skill: understand the journey of a river
River Characteristics
Flood plains and Flooding
Erosion of rock by moving water
River Land forms Explain the stream channel processes (erosion, transport, deposition) and explain the resultant landforms found on floodplains.
Image Analysis Task: Describe the features shown in each of the images. How do you think they have been formed? Extension: Come and collect an exam skills.
RIVERS AS AGENTS OF EROSION, TRANSPORTATION AND DEPOSITION
The lower course of the river
River Erosion River Erosion.
Middle course of the river
A B C Key Question: How and why do V-shaped valleys change downstream
GCSE revision 3 stages and features of rivers
River Erosion River Erosion.
PAPER 1: Living with the physical environment
Rivers Revision Booklet
The Middle and Lower Course of a River
The formation of an Ox-Bow Lake
Murrysville Pg? Date:?.
Part 3.
Stages in the Development of a River Valley
Presentation transcript:

The lower course of the river LO: I can describe and explain he formation of ox bow lakes. I can describe and explain he formation of flood plains. I can describe and explain he formation of levees.

The lower course of the river What are the characteristics? What landforms may be found here? What is the land use? D-A D-A

Oxbow lakes

Meander neck becomes smaller new course of the river oxbow lake When the river floods it breaks through the thin meander neck and the river takes the easier, straight course. This leaves the meander loop ‘cut off’ as an oxbow lake. Over time, the oxbow lake will become colonised by vegetation. Explain the formation of an oxbow lake

What is needed to make this answer better? 4

Floodplains

Floodplains and leveés are formed by deposition in times of river flood. The river’s load is composed of different sized particles. When a river floods it deposits the heaviest of these particles first. The larger particles, often pebble-sized, form the leveés. The sands, silts and clays are similarly sorted with the sands being deposited next, then the silts and finally the lightest clays. Every time the river floods deposition builds up the floodplain. Floodplain formation

This is a cross section of a floodplain. Draw a simple sketch of the diagram and annotate with the following labels: leveésclays and silts sands Floodplain formation

Name the river landform shown in this aerial photograph. What else can you identify? How can you tell that this is not the upper course of a river? Techniques – interpreting aerial photographs

The landforms of a river Which landforms are missing? Why?

How much do you know about rivers?

Map skills practice