River processes Flashcards
Erosion: Corrasion (abrasion)
Sand and pebbles dragged along river bed, wearing it away.
Erosion: Hydraulic action
Fast-flowing water forced into cracks, breaking bank up over time.
Erosion: Attrition
Rocks + stones knock together, wearing each other away.
Smaller + rounder
Erosion: Solution
Rocks (eg: limestone) dissolved in acid water.
What are the “river’s load”?
Boulders, pebbles, sand, silt and mud being transported.
Transportation: Saltation
“skipping” motion
Smaller stones + pebbles picked up then dropped again.
Transportation: Solution
Dissolved chemicals are carried in solution, invisible to the eyes.
Transportation: Traction
Large stones are dragged along the river bed.
Transportation: Suspension
Tiny particles of sediment carried in the river’s current.
What is “bedload”?
Heavier material carried along the river bed.
Deposition occurs when a river loses velocity (energy). What can cause this?
- decrease in gradient
- decrease in discharge as water drains away after heavy rain
- river meeting the sea or a lake, forming a delta
- river flowing more slowly on the inside of bends
What is discharge?
The volume of water flowing down the river at any time.
What is discharge measured in?
Cubic metres/second - cumecs
In which climate can the discharge vary considerably?
Wet + dry seasons
Affected by melting snow in spring