Where Does the “Stuff” Go? Erosion & Deposition Where Does the “Stuff” Go?
Definitions Erosion: Deposition: Removal and transport of weathered material from one location to another. Deposition: Materials are left behind in another location (final stage)
5 Agents Gravity Running Water (most overall erosion) Glaciers (most powerful) Wind (least powerful) Plants/Animals
Gravity Pulls materials down slope Forces sediment to settle during deposition Examples: glaciers, streams, landslides, mudflows, avalanches
Gravity Get image of mass wasting
Water Faster flow = More erosion Rill Erosion- small channels on the side of a slope Gully Erosion- channel becomes deep and wide (3m deep)
The Grand Canyon
Rill & Gully Erosion Gully Rill
Stream Erosion
Stream Erosion Erosion occurs upstream (towards the headwaters) Diagram of a stream system
Stream Deposition Deposition occurs downstream (towards the mouth)
Coastal Erosion/Deposition Currents, waves and tides carve out cliffs, arches, etc. Constant water movement causes constant erosion especially at shorelines
Water Image of a calm stream
Water Image of turbulent river
Water
Water
Stream Deposition Delta: build up of stream sediments at the mouth
Glaciers Can scratch, grind, polish, gouge out large sections Glaciers currently cover less than 10% of Earth’s surface, but have a huge effect
Glacier
Glaciers Image of alpine glacier
Yosemite Valley
Yosemite Valley
Wind Erosion Erosion by abrasion Hot dry areas w/ little vegetation to hold soil Wind barriers (breaks): trees planted perpendicular to wind, trap snow, conserve moisture
Wind
Wind Erosion – Arches Nat’l Park
Plants, Animals & Humans Animals burrow Humans excavate (garden, build athletic fields, build highways)