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Published byBasil Fox Modified over 8 years ago
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Works of Streams Steams doing work
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Erosion Erosion is transportation of minerals and materials by use of mobile agent Usually water, wind or ice Rivers erode their channel by water physically moving rocks and sediments or dissolving soluble minerals Sand and gravel carried by the steam can act like sandpaper
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Sediment Transport There are three different ways sediments are transported down river In Solution Dissolved load In Suspension Suspended load Scooting or rolling along the bottom Bed load
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Dissolved Load Most of the dissolved load enters streams through groundwater The amounts can vary depending on climate conditions Most materials are different forms of salts The amounts tend to be small in comparison and are measured in units of Parts Per Million (ppm) The world average is 115-120ppm
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Suspended load Most streams carry the largest part of it’s load in suspension The visible cloudiness of materials floating in the water The faster the velocity the more material will be able to be carried Suspension increases when floods occur
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Bed Load This is the part of a stream’s load of solid material that is made up of sediment too large to be carried in suspension These are larger rocks or boulders that are “scooted” across the bottom of the river bed These materials are NOT always moving like suspended and dissolved These rocks provide a lot of erosion to the channel of the stream
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Competence and Capacity Competence The largest particles the steam can move If the river’s velocity doubles it’s competence quadruples Capacity This is the maximum load it can carry Related to discharge (how much water)
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Deposition Deposition is the depositing of a rivers sediments As a river slows down the competence decreases and larger particles are deposited on the floor of channel floor Material that is dropped in this process are called alluvium These can be dropped at any point in a river’s life
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Delta? I prefer Southwest As a river enters an ocean or lake the velocity for the most part stops As a result the alluvium is dropped at a fairly fast rate Deltas are an accumulation of sediment formed where a stream enters a lake or ocean The alluvium builds up and “dams” off the channel This forces the river to change its direction
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Mississippi River Delta
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Natural Levees A Levee is a natural landform that runs parallel to a stream or river When a stream overflows it’s banks As the river overflows it’s banks it’s velocity decreases which causes it’s competence to decrease leaving behind sediments As this occurs over time the sides of the river build up Humans sometimes build levees in hope of preventing flooding
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Stream Valleys Since water always flows down hill, rivers are usually found at the bottom of a Valley Narrow Valleys Narrow V-shaped valleys results from a river cutting straight down towards it’s base level Waterfalls are also dominant features Wide Valleys Usually result when a river is closer to it’s base level Create “flood planes” areas around a river that will take on water when the river floods
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Floods Floods occur when the waters of a stream overflow their banks They are the most common and destructive natural disaster in the world They have many causes Usually rapid rain or snow melting and storms Flash floods occur and recede quickly usually due to rapid rain fall
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Controls of floods Artificial levees Are earthen mounds built on the bank of a river by people The goal is to give added protection if a river overflows it’s natural levees Flood-Control Dam These dams stop flood water and lets it out slowly Dams can cause ecological damage
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Drainage Basins A drainage Basin is the land area that contributes water to a stream
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