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Erosion

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Title: Erosion


1
Erosion
  • An Examination of the Erosional Agents That Shape
    Our Land

2
Main Erosional Agents
  • This slideshow explores the transportation
    variances and depositional features of the four
    main erosional agents.
  • Rivers
  • Glaciers
  • Wind
  • Ocean Waves

Click on the agent to go directly to that section
3
The Jobs of the Agents
  • Each erosional agent will be examined in 4 ways
  • General information
  • Erosion
  • Transportation
  • Deposition

4
RIVERS
5
River Basics Energy and Velocity
  • How much stream erosion and how much sediment is
    transported depends on the energy of the river.
  • The energy of a river depends on
  • The gradient (slope)
  • The rivers discharge
  • Channel characteristics

A braided river
6
River Features
Meanders
  • Meanders form as the stream gradient lowers. The
    river travels laterally across the flood plain
    forming large bends. Bends may become cut off
    (oxbow lakes) during flooding.

Edge of flood plain
Oxbow lakes
7
Erosional Features
  • Rivers are one of the most pervasive erosional
    agents, creating dramatic structures through
    stream abrasion.

8
River Transportation
  • Rivers transport sediment in three different
    ways
  • Solution dissolved particles
  • Suspension floating particles
  • Bed Load bouncing sliding particles

9
Depositional Features
  • Deltas form at the end of rivers/streams as
    energy drops and sediment settles out.

Sediment plumes
Back to Table of Contents
10
GLACIERS
11
Glacial Basics
  • A Glacier is a thick ice sheet (min. 50 m) that
    is always moving.
  • Glaciers cover almost 10 of the Earths land
    surface, however they are located mostly in
    Antarctica and Greenland.
  • Glaciers move about 2-5 m/day, but can move 10s
    of m/day

12
Glacial Features
  • Crevasses are large crack in the ice that can
    extend down 50 m.
  • Icebergs form at the edge of the ice as the
    glacier meets the ocean called calving.

13
2 Main Glacier Types
  • Continental Found covering Greenland and
    Antarctica. Unconfined and large
  • Alpine Found in mountain ranges and confined
    to mountain valleys

14
Erosional Features
  • As the glacier moves, sediment in the ice scrapes
    against the bedrock forming striations or groves.

Striations
15
Transportation
  • Glaciers transport sediment in two ways by
    rivers in the ice and by material being carried
    or pushed by the glacier.

Rock flour gives the river a green milky
appearance
16
Depositional Features
  • Sediment pushed to the edges of the glacier are
    called moraines.
  • Terminal at the end
  • Lateral to the side
  • Medial in the middle

Medial moraine
Lateral moraine
17
Depositional Features
Direction of ice flow
  • Drumlins form as the glacier carves out the land.

Direction of ice flow
Back to Table of Contents
18
WIND
19
Wind Basics
  • Wind is the least powerful of the erosional
    agents.
  • In order for wind to be most effective, the area
    must be dry and lacking in vegetation.
  • Deserts are excellent examples of such areas.

Dust storms
20
Desert Features
  • While most individuals think of deserts as areas
    of sand dunes only about 20 of deserts consist
    of sand. Most deserts are composed of desert
    pavement - a rocky, hard packed surface.

21
Deflation forming Desert Pavement
  • deflation--removal of fine-grained material by
    the wind--has exposed loose gravels mostly
    pebbles and cobbles. This makes up the majority
    of the desert surface.

22
Transportation
  • Most sediment is moved in the form of sand dunes.
    Sand dunes migrate through the transportation of
    sand up the gentle upwind side and deposition on
    the steeper slipface, thus sand is constantly
    recycled.

23
DepositionFormation of Sand Dunes
  • Dunes are created when loose sand gathers
    together due to an obstruction
  • The type of dune that forms depends on
  • Amount of wind
  • Amount of sand
  • Amount of vegetation

24
Sand Dunes in the Rx Record
  • The slipface of the sand dune can be preserved
    in the layers of rock

From this To this
25
Types of Dunes
Back to Table of Contents
26
OCEAN WAVES
27
Wave Basics
  • Energy from waves is generated by the wind.
  • How much energy depends on
  • Strength of wind
  • Time of blowing
  • Fetch area the wind blows over

28
Wave Erosion
  • Oceans erode the coastline through abrasion and
    wave impact.

29
Sediment Transportation
  • Longshore drift allows sediment to move down the
    coast line. As material is eroded from
    headlands, it can then be redistributed down the
    shore.

30
Wave Depositional Features
  • Waves transport material forming barrier bars and
    sandspits

Sandspit
Barrier bar
Back to Table of Contents
31
Excellent Erosional Resources
  • http//tvl1.geo.uc.edu/ice/Image/imageref.html
  • http//nsidc.org/glaciers/index.html
  • http//pubs.usgs.gov/gip/deserts/

32
The End
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