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How do processes involving water change Earth’s surface?

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Presentation on theme: "How do processes involving water change Earth’s surface?"— Presentation transcript:

1 How do processes involving water change Earth’s surface?
Water Erosion: How do processes involving water change Earth’s surface? Part 1

2 What is the MAJOR agent of erosion that has shaped Earth’s land surface? moving water

3 Water moving over land’s surface is called runoff
Water moving over land’s 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 vegetation=less 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 Stream Gully erosion in a pasture. Image by NRCS
Rill erosion at a construction site. Image by M. Mamo, Labels added by UNL Gully erosion in a pasture. Image by NRCS Stream

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

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
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

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 Minneapolis Minnesota
Waterfalls Waterfalls at the Plitvicka Jezera National Park in Croatia Minnehaha Falls, Minneapolis Minnesota

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

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


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