Stream and River Deposit
Placer Deposit
(bend load) heavy minerals are sometimes deposited at places in a river where the current slows down
Delta
(dissolved and suspended loads) a fan-shaped pattern created when a load is deposited in a river when its current slows
watershed
(drainage basins) the area of land that is drained by a water system
What are the benefits of a dam?
-control flooding -redirect the flow of water -creates artificial lakes that can (irrigate) provide a water supply to farmland during droughts -stored water can generate electricity
Old Rivers
-low gradient rivers with little erosive energy -characterized by wide, flat floodplains (valleys) and have many bends
Condensation
3C's - cooling, clouds, condensation water vapor-->water-->gas-->liquid (through cooling)
Rejuvenated River Stage
Gradient: HIGH or MODERATE FAST/MODERATE flow HIGH/MODERATE Erosive Energy
Youthful River Stages
Gradient: High/Channel:Narrow Fast flow Few Tributaries High erosive energy
Old River Stage
Gradient: LOW/Channel: WIDE SLOW flow FEW Tributaries LOW Erosive Energy
Mature River Stages
Gradient: Moderate/Channel: Wide MODERATE Flow MANY Tributaries MODERATE Erosive Energy
Bed Load
LARGE materials carried along a stream bed (pebbles and boulders)
What is largest watershed in the U.S.?
Mississippi River watershed
Suspended Load
SMALL rocks and soil carried downstream causing it to look muddy
What drains a watershed?
a water system
Floodplain
areas along a river that forms from sediment deposited when a river overflows
What are the tree types of load that a stream can carry?
bed load, suspended load, dissolved load
Levee
build up of sediment deposited along the channel of a river
Gradient
change in elevation- the measure in the change in elevation over a certain distance
What are some factors that influence the development of the river?
climate, gradient, and load
Water Cycle
continuos movement of the Earth's water from the ocean to the atmosphere to the land and back to the ocean
What are two types of barriers that can prevent flooding?
dams and levees
Percolation
downward movement of water through pores and other spaces in the soil
Mature Rivers
erode chanels WIDER rather than steeper, they have good drainage allowing for more discharge
Youthful Rivers
erode channels DEEPER rather than wider, they flow quickly because of their steep gradient
Alluvial Fan
fan-shaped deposits that form on dry land
Rejuvenated Rivers
found where the land is raised by tectonic activity -rivers become steeper and the river flows more quickly -step-like formations (terraces) form on both sides of the stream valley
What are 3 factors that affect the rate of stream erosion?
load, gradient, and discharge
Load
material- the material carried by a stream
Where do deltas usually form?
on a flat surface and its usually made up of mostly mud
Channel
path that a steam follows
Which of the following places forms at places in a river where the water current flows?
placer deposit
Runoff
precipitation that flows over land into streams and rivers. The water later enters oceans.
Erosion
process by which soil and sediment are transported from one location to another
deposition
process in which material (sediment) is laid down or dropped
Precipitation
rain, snow, sleet or hail falls from the clouds onto the Earth's land and oceans
sediment
rock and soil deposited by streams
When do rivers and streams deposit sediment?
speed of the water current slow (decreases)
How does a channel turn into a river?
starts off narrow and steep then rock and soil being carried downstream widens and deepens it until it turns to a river
Tributary
stream that flow into a lake or a larger stream
Where does the water cycle get its energy?
the Sun
What affect the size of a load?
the stream's speed (fast moving stream carry large loads than slower ones)
Why are floodplains both good and bad for farming?
they destroy crops but produce rich, fertile land for farmers
Dam
type of barrier that can control flooding
Dissolved Load
very fine materials that dissolve in the water that can't be seen (sodium and calcium)
Discharge
volume of water- the amount of water that a stream or river carries at a given time
Evaporation
water-->water vapor -->liquid-->gas (through heating)
What type of regions are river systems divided into?
watersheds
River
what a stream turns into when it gets wider and deeper
What are the agents of erosion?
wind, rain, ice and snow