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Published byJulian Williamson Modified over 7 years ago
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What are landforms? The natural shapes or features on the Earth’s surface are called landforms. Many different types of landforms can be found on the Earth – here are just a few examples:
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Peninsula Peninsula – a large piece of land that juts far out into the water and is almost surrounded by water. Florida is a peninsula.
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Harbor Harbor – a deep, sheltered bay.
The Statue of Liberty is in New York Harbor.
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Bay Bay – a small area of sea or lake partly enclosed by dry land. Coves and inlets are very small bays. The Golden Gate Bridge is in the San Francisco Bay.
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Island Island – a piece of land that is smaller than a continent and completely surrounded by water. The famous prison, Alcatraz, was built on an island in the San Francisco Bay!
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Mountains Mountain – a rugged, upthrust mass of rock that looms high above the surrounding land. The Earth’s highest mountain is Mount Everest (29,029 ft). Highest in the US is Denali in Alaska (Mt. McKinley – 20,310 ft)
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River River – a long, large stream.
The Mississippi River is the largest river in the United States.
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Coast Coast – the edge of land that borders a body of water.
Most of the world’s major cities are along coasts or rivers leading to coasts.
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Valley River made Valley – a gently sloping depression between hills or mountains. Yosemite Valley in California is a glacial valley (one formed by a glacier). Glacier made
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Desert Desert – a very dry or desolate land that receives little or no rainfall. The largest desert is the Sahara in Africa which is 3.5 million square miles.
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Oasis Oasis - an isolated green spot in the desert where water flows up from an underground spring. The Sahara Desert has about 90 oases.
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Prairie Prairie – a temperate grassland characterized by a rich variety of grasses. Prairie once covered more than 400,000 square miles of North America.
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Delta Delta – a fan shaped deposit of mud and sand, often green with vegetation, found at the mouths of many rivers. There is a delta where the Mississippi River empties into the Gulf of Mexico.
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Plateau Plateau – a large highland plain that rises sharply above the surrounding land. In Idaho, farmers have irrigated and planted crops atop plateaus.
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Isthmus Isthmus – a narrow strip of land that connects two much larger areas of land and narrowly separates two large bodies of water. The Isthmus of Panama connects North and South America.
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Beach Sandy or rocky land at the edge of an ocean, sea, or lake
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Strait Strait – a narrow waterway that connects two larger bodies of water. The Strait of Gibraltar connects the Mediterranean Sea and the Atlantic Ocean.
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Canyon A canyon is a deep valley with very steep sides. Rivers often flow through canyons. The Grand Canyon is a perfect example of this!
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Hill A hill is a rounded area of land higher than the area around it (not as high as a mountain).
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Dune A sand dune is a hill of sand that is deposited by the wind.
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Cave A cave is a large underground chamber in a hillside or cliff.
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Butte An isolated hill or mountain with steep sides
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Lagoon A shallow body of saltwater separated from the sea by a shallow sandbank or coral reef
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Atoll A ring-shaped coral reef that encircles a lagoon
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Archipelago A stretch of water containing many islands
A famous archipelago are the Hawaiian Islands.
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Fjord a long, narrow, deep inlet of the sea between high glacier cliffs
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Volcano a mountain having a vent through which lava and gas erupts from the earth's crust there are 169 volcanoes in the United States
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Cliff a steep rock face at the edge of the sea
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Tributary a river or stream flowing into a larger river
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That’s ALL folks! There are many more landforms that make up our
beautiful planet, but for now…. That’s ALL folks!
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