Rivers Flashcards
What are the features of the upper course of a river?
V-shaped valleys, interlocking spurs, rapids, waterfalls, gorges
What are the three stages of the river?
The upper course
The middle course
The lower course
What are features of the middle course?
U-shaped valleys, meanders, oxbow lakes
What are features of the lower course of a river
Floodplains, deltas
How are V-shaped valleys formed?
1- Rocks & sediment flowing quickly in a river erode it vertically downwards
2- the banks of the steep river are weathered away by rain and wind to form a steep, v-shape
How are interlocking spurs formed?
Meanders in V-shaped valleys cause the tops of the valleys -the ‘spurs’- to line up and interlock
How are waterfalls formed?
Water passes of a cliff of hard rock on top of soft rock
The water erodes away the soft rock leaving a ledge of hard rock above and a worn away bottom called a plunge pool
Eventually the ledge of hard rock above becomes too heavy and collapses, forming a waterfall
This process repeats over and over
How are gorges/canyons formed?
As a waterfall continuously erodes and moves backwards, it leaves a strip of a river where it once was- this is called a gorge/canyon
How are U-shaped valleys formed?
- Starts off as a V-shaped valley
- lots of snow falls and compounds to form a glacier
- the ice erodes the steep valleys of a V-shaped valley through abrasion and a process called plucking (rocks in the valley getting stuck to the ice and literally pulled out of the ground)
- when this glacier melts, it leaves a much shallower valley: a U-shaped valley
How are meanders formed?
- Rivers slow down as they enter the middle & lower course
- A slower river makes it easier for sediment to be deposited
- sediment is deposited on the inner edge of the river whilst the outer edge is eroded away, forming meanders
How are rapids formed?
- Sections of soft and hard rock are next to each other at the bottom of a river
- when a river passes over, the soft rock is eroded and the hard rock isn’t leaving bumps in the river
- when the water goes over the bumps it bounces and splashes: this is a rapid
How are oxbow lakes formed
- A meander becomes thinner and thinner over time
- At a time of flood the water overflows the meander and finds a shorter root, leaving the meander useless
- Over time sediment deposits at the entrance to the meander, completely separating it from the straight river
- this separated meander is called an oxbow lake
look at a picture and you’ll understand
How is a delta formed?
- Rocks from the upper course are eroded away at high speeds and carried down stream
- these rocks are deposited at the bottom of the river as a sandy delta