Geography Exam 5
Erg
"sea of sand" A large area covered with loose sand, generally arranged in some sort of dune formation by the wind
Cut Bank
(Outside of curves) where water moves fastest and cuts the bank
How much of the land was ice-covered at the max extent of Pleistocene Glaciation
1/3
How many glacial periods were there in Pleistocene Glaciation
18 or 19
When was Pleistocene Glaciation
2.5 million ybp to 10,000 ybp
How many desert streams are ephemeral
99%
Hamada
A barren desert surface of consolidated material that usually consists of exposed bedrock but it is sometimes composed of sedimentary material that has been cemented together by salts evaporated from groundwater
Barchan Dune
A crescent-shaped sand dune with cusps of the crescent pointing downwind
Desert Varnish
A dark, shiny coating of iron and manganese oxides that forms on rock surfaces exposed to desert air for a long time
Reg
A desert surface of coarse material from which all sand and dust have been removed by wind and water erosion. Often referred to as desert pavement or desert armor.
Valley Glaciers
A long, narrow feature resembling a river of ice, which spills out of its originating basins and flows down-valley
Sand Dune
A mound, ridge, or low hill of loose, windblown sand.
Perennial
A permanent stream that contains water year-round
stream capture
A portion of the flow of one stream is diverted into that of another by natural processes.
Knickpoint
A sharp irregularity in a stream-channel profile (waterfall)
Cirque Glacier
A small glacier confined to its cirque and not moving down-valley
Ephemeral
A stream that carries water only during the "wet season" or during and immediately after rains.
Ephemeral Stream
A stream that carries water only during the "wet season" or during and immediately after rains.
Intermittent
A stream that carries water only part of the time, during the "wet season" or during and immediately after rains.
Exotic Stream
A stream that flows into a dry region, bringing its water from somewhere else
Point Bar
Accumulation of alluvium
Downcutting
Action of stream to erode a deeper channel; occurs when stream is flowing swiftly and/or flowing down a sleep slope
Rock Fragments
All rocks chip and grind the scrambled, break off fragments from the bottom and side and become smaller
Pleistocene Glaciation
Alternation of glacial and interglacial periods
Drainage Basin (Watershed)
An area that contributes overland flow and groundwater to a specific stream.
Base Level
An imaginary surface extending underneath the continents from sea level at the coasts and indicating the lowest level to which land can be eroded.
Alluvium
Any stream-deposited sedimentary material
4 Types of Active Dunes
Barchan, Transverse, Seifs, Star Dunes
Undercutting
Causes landslides that dump more loose material into the water to be swept downstream.
Streamflow
Channeled movement of water along valley bottom.
2 types of non-arid dunes
Coastal Dunes, Loess
Stream Order
Concept that describes the hierarchy of a drainage network. (orders)
continental glaciers
Continental ice sheets, outlet glaciers, ice shelf, ice berg
How does turbulence influence erosion capability?
Creating flow patterns that pry and lift rock materials from the streambed.
Transverse Dune
Crescent-shaped sand dune ridges that have convex sides facing the prevailing direction of wind and which occur where the supply of sand is great. The crest is perpendicular to the wind direction vector and aligned in parallel waves across the land
Three different features found in the floodplain
Cutoff meander, natural levee, yahoo stream
Three theories of landform development
Davis's Geomorphic Cycle, Penck's Theory of Crustal Change and Slope Development, Equilibrium Theory
5 Drainage Patterns
Dendritic, Trellis, Radial, Centripetal, Annular
Subsequent Stream
Develop along zones of structural weakness
Trellis
Developed on alternating bands of hard and soft strata, with long parallel subsequent streams linked by short, right-angled segments and joined by short tributaries
Playa
Dry lake bed in a basin of interior drainage
Salina
Dry lake bed that contains an unusually heavy concentration of salt in the lake-bed sediment
Desert Landscapes
Erg, Reg, Hamada
Consequent Stream
First to develop on newly uplifted land and many streams remain consequent throughout development
Floodplain
Flattish valley floor covered with stream-deposited sediments (alluvium) and subject to periodic or episodic inundation by overflow from the stream.
Radial
Found when streams descend from some sort of concentric uplift, such as an isolated volcano.
Continental Ice Sheets
Glaciers that form in non mountainous areas of the continent
Flow Speed
Governed by the gradient of the scrambled, the shape of the channel, and the volume of the flow.
Salina Lake
Great Salt Lake, Utah
Desert Pavement
Hard and relatively impermeable desert surface of tightly packed small rocks
mountain glaciers
Highland Icefields, valley glaciers, alpine glacier, cirque glacier, piedmont glacier
Ice Berg
Huge floating ice mass
Superimposed
Ignores local structure, original pattern erodes
Alpine Glacier
Individual glacier that develops near a mountain crest line and normally moves down-valley for some distance
Meandering
Intricate pattern of smooth curves, loops and curves
Highland icefield (nunatak)
Largely, unconfined ice sheet in high mountain areas
Outlet Glaciers
Long tongues of ice that extend between rimming hills to the sea
Seifs
Long, narrow desert dunes that usually occur in multiplicity and in parallel arrangement
Dissolved Load
Minerals and salts are dissolved in the water and carried in solution
Braided
Multiplicity of interwoven and interconnected channels separated by low bars or islands of sand, gravel, and other debris.
Example of an exotic stream
Nile River of North Africa
Splash Erosion
Particles that move downhill on sloping ground.
Indirect effects of Pleistocene Glaciation
Periglacial zone, sea-level change, crustal depression, pluvial developments, pluvial effects and pleistocene lakes.
Delta
Produced by the sudden reduction of a stream's velocity and the resulting deposition of the stream's load.
Ice Shelf
Projection of ice out over the sea
Star Dunes
Pyramid-shaped sand dune with arms radiating out in three or more directions
Abrasion
Requires "tools" in the form of airborne sand and dust particles. The wind drives these particles against rock and soil surfaces in a form of natural sandblasting
Gully Erosion
Rills coalesce into fewer and larger channels called gullies. The gullies get larger and larger until they incorporate into the drainage system of the adjacent valley.
Annular
Ring-shaped drainage either on a dome or in a basin
Saline Lake
Salt lake; commonly caused by interior stream drainage in an arid environment
Coastal Dunes
Sand dunes formed from sand being blown inland
Bedload
Sand, gravel, and larger rock fragments moving in a stream by saltation and traction.
Rill Erosion
Sheet flow is broken up into tiny channels called rills, the flow picks up additional material and scores the slope with numerous parallel seams
Straight
Short and uncommon
Corrosion
Soluble rock being dissolved by water.
four channel patterns
Straight, sinuous, meandering, and braided
Antecedent Stream
Stream that predates the existence of the hill or mountain through which it flows
Centripetal
Streams converging in a basin
Where did the ice in the Pleistocene Glaciation originate?
Subpolar and midlatitude regions
Valley
That portion of the total terrain in which a stream drainage system is clearly established.
How does flow speed relate to erosion
The erosive effectiveness of streamflow is determined by flow speed
Overland Flow
The general movement of unchanneled surface water down the slope of the land surface.
Graded Stream
The gradient just allows the stream to transport its load
Interfluve
The higher land or ridge above the valley sides that separate adjacent valleys; drained by overland flow.
Piedmont Glacier
The leading edge of a valley glacier reaches a flat area and escapes from the confines of its valley walls
Capacity
The maximum load that a stream can transport under given conditions.
Recurrence Interval
The probability of a given-size flood occurring in a year; also called the return period
Deflation
The shifting of loose particles by wind blowing them into the air or rolling them along the ground
Competence
The size of the largest particle that can be transported by a stream.
Suspended Load
The very fine particles of clay and salt that are in suspension and move along with the flow of water without ever touching the stream bed.
Dendritic Pattern
Treelike, branching pattern that consists of a random merging of streams with tributaries joining larger streams
Knickpoint Migration
Upstream shift in location of a knickpoint and due to erosion
Fossil Dune
Vast deposits of sandstone exhibit the characteristic of "cross-bedding" of wind-deposited sand, rather than the more typical horizontal strata of sediments accumulated in bodies of water
Stream Discharge
Volume or flow of a stream
Sheet Erosion
Water flows across the surface as a thin sheet, transporting material already loosened by splash erosion.
What conditions in deserts make them so different
Weathering, soil and regolith, soil creep, impermeable surfaces, sand, rainfall, fluvial deposition, wind, basins of interior drainage, and vegetation
Sinuous
Winding and found in every type of topographic setting
What glacial period ended Pleistocene Glaciation
Wisconsin (Wurm) Glaciation
Largest delta in the US
Yukon
Loess
wind-deposited silt that is fine grained, calcerous, and buff colored. found in midlatitudes: US, Russia, China, and Argentina