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Published byKatrina Powers Modified over 9 years ago
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The faster a stream flows, the larger the size sediments it can carry. ESRT chart pg. 6 Larger sediments settle out faster, they tend to be heavier and sink faster The more rounded a sediment, the faster it will settle The larger the density, the faster it will settle
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When a mixture of sediment sizes in water settle out rapidly, a horizontal bed or layer develops. The sediment size will decrease from the bottom to the top. This is called graded bedding. In a delta, the larger, denser and more rounded sediments will settle first.
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In a glacier and mass movements, sediments of all sizes, shapes and densities are deposited together. This will produce a unsorted un-layered deposit dominent.
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Since all sediments picked up by the stream during erosion must eventually be deposited, the system is said to be in dynamic equilibrium. Meaning: Rate of erosion = Rate of deposition
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~ In a stream itself, deposition occurs on the inside of meanders, where the velocity is low. ~ When a stream overflows, sediments form levees at the edge of the river. Sediments also spread out in the floodplain ~ If the stream changes its path, you can have a meander or bend that is cut off, creating a curved lake (oxbow lake)
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~ At the end of a glacier, sediments are dropped in unsorted sheets called a moraine. ~ If sediment deposits at the bottom of a glacier, it tends to be a low, long, narrow, streamlined oval mound. This is called a drumlin. ~ When a block of ice is left behind and melts it forms a depression called a kettle. When they get filled with water, it is called a kettle lake. ~ As a glacier melts, running water will produce a sorted deposit called a outwash plain (broad delta like feature).
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~Wave movement towards the shore builds up sediment at the coastline, called a beach. ~ If a sandbar rises above sea level, vegetation can stabilize and grow, creating a barrier island.
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~ The most recognizable feature of mass movement is a pile of sediment often found at the base of cliffs.
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