Exam 3
"_________________" means that a river is building up its valley floor by depositing sediment.
Aggradation
Karst landforms
found in Central Florida, Southern Indiana and Western Kentucky, the Ozarks of Arkansas and Missouri, the Yucatan peninsula of Mexico, the Carpathian Basin of southeastern Europe (former Yugoslavia), the Shan Plateau of China, and other areas underlain by limestone which have a humid climate.
Radial Pattern
found when streams descend from some sort of conical feature such as a volcano or mountain peak
Cone of Depression
The water table drops where a well pumps water out, forming an inverted "cone."
Braided Steams
have many channels which are separated by bars of sand, gravel, and other loose debris
a body of sand that attaches an island to the mainland
Tombolo
______ _______ occurs in the latest stage of karstification when most of the limestone has been dissolved leaving behind a few steep-sided hills.
Tower Karst
A "_________" or dry valley forms when sinkholes or dolines intersect and capture all of the surface drainage.
Uvala
Groundwater
Water found in pores of soil and sediment plus narrow fractures in bedrock
a fairly flat rock surface left behind as the marine cliff retreats land-ward
Wave cut platform
Alluvial fan
a cone-shaped deposit formed where a gully emerges onto a low, flat surface
Vertical accretion
a gradual build-up of sediments on the floodplain by multiple flood events, leading to an increase in floodplain elevation
Entrenched Stream
a stream that cuts deeply into surrounding rocks following tectonic uplift
Base Level
an imaginary surface extending beneath the continents from sea level which represents the lowest elevation to which streams can incise (erode) their channels
Meander Scar
an oxbow lake that has filled with sediement
Yazoo stream
any tributary stream that runs parallel to, and within the floodplain of a larger river for considerable distance, before eventually joining it.
The aquifer is capped by an
aquiclude (confining bed or layer)
Unpaired
are at different elevations and often form by erosion rather than deposition (usually erosional)
Badlands
areas from which streams have removed all easily transported sediment, leaving behind a gullied landscape mantled by clayey soils
Backswamps
areas on the floodplain where fine sediment (silt and clay) are stored and vegetation thrives
Natural Levees
banks of slightly higher ground fringing a stream channel
Local base level
controlled by local features such as a larger river or a lake or a resistant bed
Oxbow Lakes
crescent-shaped lake formed in abandoned meanders or Cutoffs
Raising base level causes ____________
deposition
Annular Pattern
develops either on a dome or in a basin surrounded by resistant rock layers
An "________ ___ __________" often results where the two rivers were joined, as in the Niger River of West Africa.
elbow of capture
Lowering base level causes ___________
erosion
Nested Fill Terraces
form as a river cuts down and deposits paired terraces
Cut-in Fill Terraces
form by erosion into older alluvium
River Terraces
form when a stream abandons its floodplain, incising its channel down to flow at a lower elevation
Paired terraces
found at the same elevation on either side of a river channel (usually depositional)
Knickpoint migration
occurs where a bedrock escarpment or slope break retreats upstream - Niagara Falls has migrated upstream from the Niagara Escarpment since the end of the last ice age.
Stream Capture
occurs where a stream lengthens its course by headwater erosion to the point that it "captures" the flow of another river.
Longitudinal Profile
plots of the elevation vs distance from the stream mouth to the upper reaches within watershed basin.
Abyssal zone
portion of the ocean deeper than about 2,000 m (6,600 feet) and shallower than about 6,000 m (20,000 feet)
Aquifer
rock or sediment through which groundwater moves easily
Ultimate (absolute) base level
sea level
Delta
sediments deposited at the mouth of a river where it enters a body of standing water, such as a lake or ocean
Bajada
several alluvial fans that merge together along the base of a mountain range
Straight Channels
short and uncommon except for in mountain areas where valleys are confined by bedrock
high tides
spring and neap
V-shaped canyon
streams in mountainous areas cut a V-shaped notch
Subtidal
the area where the seabed is below the lowest tide
tidal range
the difference in water level between a high tide and a low tide
Littoral zone
the down-sloping shelf of a pond or lake
Floodplain
the flat area bordering a river where sediment is stored when the river floods. Floodplains accrete vertically in horizontal layers
Zone of Saturation
the ground immediately below the water table
Base Level
the lowest level to which a stream can erode
Bathyal zone
the ocean depths or floor usually from 600 to 6000 feet (180 to 1800 meters)
Cutoff
the point where the river changes course
Fluvial Incision
the predominant erosional process responsible for forming valleys and relatively flat landscapes referred to as "peneplains" by William Morris Davis
Zone of Aeration
the region between the earth's surface and the water table
supertidal zone
top of highest tide to the landward edge of coast
The ________ __________ is the top of the saturated zone.
water table
Centripetal Pattern
where streams converge into a basin
Rectangular Pattern
where streams make abrupt right-angle bends controlled by joints or faults in the bedrock
Meandering Channels
where the channel curves and deposits sediment to construct many recognizable landforms
Trellis Pattern
where there is one preferred direction of drainage development along rock layers which are less resistant to erosion. This pattern is found in the Ridge and Valley province of eastern North America.
about ____ percent of Earth's land area has soluble carbonate rocks
10
marine terraces
100 feet = Wicomico 60 feet = Penholoway 40 feet = Pamlico 5 feet = Silver Bluff/Princess Anne
tidal period
12 hours
_____ percent of the land area in the conterminous United States
15
Submergent (Drowned) Coastlines
A landform formed when sea level rises or when land sinks
__________ is landward of the high-tide shoreline
Backshore
low ridges of sand that run parallel to shore at distances of 3 to 30 km offshore, more are 1 to 5 km wide and 15 to 30 km long
Barrier island
body of water that is sheltered from strong wave action by the configuration of the coast
Bay
a body of sand that closes off a bay
Baymouth bar
a thick, wedge shaped deposit.
Beach
Emergent (Erosional) Coastlines
Coastline that results from either a drop of sea level or an uplifting of the land
Rivers erode the bank on the outside of a meander bend, forming a ________
Cutbank
"______________" means that a river valley is being cut down into underlying sediment and rock.
Degradation
a "_________" is a large sinkhole which results from the collapse of the roof of a subsurface cavern.
Doline
______ ______________ often occur in karst areas where surface flow disappears underground.
Dry streambeds
a bay that has a major river emptying into it, creating a unique mix of salt and freshwater giving a unique ecosystem
Estuary
The ______ _______ divides the Coastal Plain from the Piedmont
Fall Line
___________ is exposed when the tide is out (low tide) and submerged when the tide is in (high tide)
Foreshore
_____________are eruptions of steam and other gases from surface cracks which are connected to deep-seated heat
Fumaroles
_________ occur where steam and water erupt after building up pressure within a restricted subterranean tube
Geysers
Most of Earth's freshwater is stored as ________________
Groundwater
Graded stream
Has just the velocity required for the load supplied from the drainage basin
_________ represent the discharge of underground water which has come in contact with heated rock or magma.
Hot Springs
__________ and ______________ are essentially insoluble.
Iron (Fe); Aluminum (Al)
After an Oxbow Lake has filled in with sediment, the remaining feature is still recognizable as a ___________ ________ because of different soil and vegetation
Meander Scar
bar within a bay
Midbay bar
__________ ("shoreface") lies between low-tide shoreline and wave base at low tide
Nearshore
_________ is seaward of storm wave base
Offshore
Rivers deposit _______ _______ on the inside of meander bends
Point Bars
A Swallow Hole or "________" which is associated with a disappearing stream
Ponor
an area that is under water during high tide and above water at low tide, area of high sedimentation rates
Salt marsh/tidal flat
a mass of resistant rock that projects out of the waves with an arch shape
Sea arch
pockets of weak rock that are excavated by wave action
Sea caves
a pile of resistant rock sticking up out of the waves
Sea stack
________ extends between lowest tide level and the highest elevations affected by storm waves
Shore
_________ marks the contact between land and sea
Shoreline
_____________ and ____________ can be completely dissolved
Sodium (Na); Calcium (Ca)
______________ are deposited in caverns when water leaves behind the compounds (principally Ca and CO3) it was carrying in solution.
Speleothems
a body of sand attached to the mainland at one end and built out into the ocean
Spit
__________ hang down from on top. __________ build up from the bottom. _________ form when the two unite.
Stalactites; Stalagmites; Pillars
Dendritic Pattern
looks like the veins on the underside of a leaf. It forms where there are no changes in rock type or slope which are able to control the drainage.
Increasing gradient causes ______________
meandering