What is a drainage basin?
An area of land drained by a river and its tributaries
What is weathering and what are the three types?
Breakdown of rock by natural processes
- Biological, chemical and physical
What is physical weathering
free-thaw
- rainwater enters cracks and freezes, water expands and breaks rocks into the soil
What is chemical weathering
Acid rain reacts with the weak minerals and decays the rocks causing it to dissolve
What is biological weathering
Plant roots grow into the rock cracks and cause them to split apart
What is mass movement
Downward movement due to gravity
What is soil creep
Individual soil particles move slowly down the slope under the force of gravity and collect at the bottom of the valley
The river may erode this
What is slumping
Bottom of the valley is eroded by the river and the slopes become steeper and the material above slides downwards, rotating as it does so
- triggered by heavy rain and saturates overlying rock and makes it heavy and liable to slide
What is river erosion?
Water wearing away rocks and soils on the valley bottoms and causes it to slide
What is hydraulic action
When high velocity flows causes it to hit the riverbed and wears it away
What is abrasion
Material carried in the river rubs against the bed and banks of the channels and causes it to wear away
- abrasion causes the most erosion
What is solution
River water can dissolve some rocks and minerals
- limestone and chalk are the most affected
What is attrition
Sediment particles collide with each other
- become rounder and smaller downstream
What are the 4 transportation of load?
Deposition
What is traction?
Rolling of stones over the river bed
What is saltation?
Particles the size of sand grains bounce over each other
What is suspension
Silt sized particles carried in the river
What is solution
DIssolved minerals in the water
How do interlocking spurs form?
How do waterfalls and gorges form?
Where to gorges mainly form?
How do meanders form?
Why is the cross section of a meander asymmterical?
The outisde is steep and the inside is gentle
How do oxbow lakes form?