Erosion and Deposition

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Presentation transcript:

Erosion and Deposition Review RiverDeposition Introduce New forms of Deposition: Waves Glaciers MassMovement

Wave Erosion Landforms created: Beaches Cliffs Sea stacks Waves continuously break rock into smaller pieces. Landforms created: Beaches Cliffs Sea stacks

Wave Erosion

Wave Deposition Waves carry sand, rock fragments, and shells. This gets deposited on a shoreline . This creates a beach. Longshore currents moves parallel to a shoreline, moving sediment in a zig-zag pattern

3 Types of Wave Deposition A sandbar is an underwater or exposed ridge of sand, gravel, or shell material. A barrier spit is an exposed sandbar that is connected to the shoreline. Cape Cod, MA is an example of a barrier spit. A barrier island is a long, narrow island usually made of sand that forms offshore parallel to t he shoreline

Wind Erosion Plant roots hold soil in place Wind moves sediment. Plant roots hold soil in place Less vegetation, more erosion Dust Bowl happened this way

3 forms of wind erosion: Saltation is the skipping and bouncing movement of sand-sized particles in the direction the wind is blowing. During deflation, wind removes the top layer of fine sediment or soil and leaves behind rock fragments that are too heavy to be lifted by the wind The grinding and wearing down of rock surfaces by other rock or sand particles is called abrasion. Abrasion commonly happens in areas where there are strong winds, loose sand, and soft rocks

Wind Deposition Wind eventually drops everything it carries Faster it blows, more it carries. When it slows, it drops what it carries EX: Sand dunes

Glacier Erosion Glaciers are rivers of moving ice Gravity moves them They pickup rocks and sediments as they move Brainpop

Ice Deposition As a glacier melts, it drops what it carries Glacial drift - all material carried and deposited by glaciers. Glacial drift is divided into two main types, till and stratified drift.

Deposition by Gravity Mass movement of sediments downhill

Mass Movement Slow mass movement: creep Rapid movement: landslides, rock falls, mudflows landslide in Russia ALPS Rock fall in France mudslide in British Columbia Slow mass movement: creep

Brainpop Avalanches