Rivers Flashcards

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0
Q

What are the features of the upper course of a river?

A

V-shaped valleys, interlocking spurs, rapids, waterfalls, gorges

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1
Q

What are the three stages of the river?

A

The upper course
The middle course
The lower course

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2
Q

What are features of the middle course?

A

U-shaped valleys, meanders, oxbow lakes

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3
Q

What are features of the lower course of a river

A

Floodplains, deltas

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4
Q

How are V-shaped valleys formed?

A

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

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5
Q

How are interlocking spurs formed?

A

Meanders in V-shaped valleys cause the tops of the valleys -the ‘spurs’- to line up and interlock

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6
Q

How are waterfalls formed?

A

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

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7
Q

How are gorges/canyons formed?

A

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

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8
Q

How are U-shaped valleys formed?

A
  • 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
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9
Q

How are meanders formed?

A
  • 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
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10
Q

How are rapids formed?

A
  • 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
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11
Q

How are oxbow lakes formed

A
  • 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

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12
Q

How is a delta formed?

A
  • 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
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