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Erosion and Deposition

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Title: Erosion and Deposition


1
Erosion and Deposition
2
Two Important Definitions
  • Erosion the removal of weathered rock and soil
    from its original location
  • Deposition the dropping of eroded material in a
    different location (when you make a deposit at
    the bank you are leaving money here rock is
    deposited in a new place)

3
Gravity
  • The power behind most erosional agents
  • Rock is pulled downslope by the force of gravity

4
4 Types of Erosion
  1. Erosion by Water
  2. Erosion by Glacier
  3. Erosion by Wind
  4. Erosion by Living Things

5
1. Erosion by Water
  • Rill Erosion when a narrow stream cuts a small
    channel into the land (think narrow stream)
  • Gully Erosion stream of water has gone beyond
    Rill Erosion and now the stream of water is deep
    and wide (think wider stream)

6
1. Erosion by Water- Rivers and Streams
  • Each year streams carry billions of metric tons
    of sediments and weathered material to the
    coastal areas
  • Over time, the build up of sediment produces
    deltas (example Colorado River Delta-right
    Mississippi River Delta - left)

7
1. Erosion by Water- Waves
  • Sand on an ocean shoreline is repeatedly picked
    up, moved, and deposited
  • Constant movement of water is a continuous
    erosional process
  • Deposits can lead to sand bars and barrier
    islands (example Outer Banks of N.Carolina)

8
2. Glacial Erosion
  • Currently cover 10 of the Earths surface
  • Once covered 30
  • Scraping and gouging the earth as they move huge
    rock and piles of debris over great distances
  • Glacial movements scratch and grind surfaces and
    deposit material over long distances

9
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10
3. Wind Erosion
  • Moves fine, dry particles a great distance
  • Most common in areas without vegetation holding
    the soil into places
  • Can be prevented with a wind barrier (stand of
    trees or other vegetation planted perpendicular
    to the direction of the wind)

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12
4. Erosion by Living Things
  • Examples of Erosion by living things
  • Excavating land
  • Planting a garden
  • Developing land
  • Building a highway
  • All of these can lead to erosion

13
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14
Mass Movement
  • Downslope moving of soil and weathered rock
    resulting from the force of gravity
  • ALL mass movements occur on slopes

15
Factors that Influence Mass Movement
  1. Materials weight
  2. Materials resistance to sliding or flowing
  3. Trigger (like at earthquake)
  4. Water

16
Classification of Mass Movement
  • Creep slow, steady downflow of loose weathered
    material
  • a) slowly creep can cause once vertical utility
    poles and fences to tilt

17
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18
  • 2) Flows slow movements of soil
  • a) mudflows swiftly moving mixtures of mud
    and water

19
Mudflow
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vn1cCs-S5EKc

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21
  • 3) Slides top layers of soil are thin and move
    downslope rapidly
  • a) Landslides
  • b) Slumps (landslide on a curved surface)
  • c) Avalanche (snow melts in sun, refreezes at
    night and the fallen snow moves downslope)

22
Avalanche
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?v99j17GL3qlE

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24
  • 4) Rockfalls rocks are loosened by physical
    weathering,
  • they then break loose and fall downslope
  • a) less likely in humid climates where a layer of
    soil and vegetation cover the rock

25
Rock fall
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vZVYGJYnJTi0

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27
People
  • Humans can minimize the destruction caused by
    mass movement by not building near the base of
    unstable slopes
  • gt25o slopes are at the greatest risk of a
    catastrophic mass movement
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