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Rivers - Form 3
Rivers - Form 3
Rivers - Form 3
FORM 3
Rivers
Some key terms
The water cycle
Water moves through evaporation from the sea to the atmosphere, falls on land as rain and then flows
back to the sea.
How water flows into rivers
… solution and suspension in the water, saltation as sand grains bounce along, and traction of rocks along
the riverbed.
Processes of river transportation
1. Traction
• Movement of large materials such as boulders along the river bed
by rolling or sliding
2. Saltation
• Bouncing of small rock fragments such as gravel along the river bed
3. Suspension
• Lightweight materials such as fine sand and clay remain suspended
in the water
• Suspension load makes up the largest portion of river load
4. Solution
• Movement of dissolved minerals in the water
Summary of river transportation processes
River deposition
• When the energy of a river falls too low, it starts to
deposit its load
• The energy of a river can decline as a result of reduced
discharge during a dry season
• Deposition can occur anywhere along the river channel
• The heavier materials are the first to be deposited
while the finest materials are transported farther
downstream before being deposited
How material is deposited
Large boulders first, then gravel, then silt and clay on the flood plain. Dissolved minerals
are usually carried right to the sea.
The upper, middle and lower course of a
river
Erosion mainly in the upper course, deposition mainly in the lower course.
Landforms in the upper, middle and lower
course
V-shaped valley, waterfall and rapids. Broad valley with flood plain and meanders. Flat landscape with meanders,
levees and delta.
How the valley changes
At first the river erodes mainly downwards. Then it erodes the valley sides to create a flood plain. Deposition in
the lower course.
Is this river in its upper, middle or lower course?
•Which of these indicators
can be seen:
• V-shaped valley?
• meanders?
• flood plain?
• rapids?
• steep valley sides?
•What type of material is
deposited along the river?
Waterfalls
•Waterfalls may be formed:
• at the edge of a plateau
• on a band of resistant rock
• in a steep-sided glacial
valley eroded by ice.
•There is a deep plunge pool
at the base of a waterfall.
•As the waterfall is eroded, its
position moves upstream. A
steep-sided gorge is created
on the downstream side.
Meanders
•Meanders usually formed in
the middle and lower course.
•The zone of fastest flow
swings from side to side,
creating meanders.
•Erosion on the outer bank
produces a river cliff or
bluff.
•Deposition on the meander
core forms a point bar and
slip-off slope.
Oxbow lakes
•Erosion narrows the neck of
a meander.
•The river breaks through,
forming an island and cut-off.
•Sediment is deposited,
creating an oxbow lake.
•The lake is filled with
alluvium (river deposits),
forming an abandoned
meander.
Levees
•Sediment is deposited when
the river floods.
•Most sediment is deposited
close to the river channel.
•Levees are formed along the
river banks.
•There is also deposition on
the river bed. The surface of
the river may be above the
level of the flood plain.
Braided rivers
•In a braided river channel,
deposits of sand, gravel and
rocks create temporary sand
bars and vegetated islands.
•Braided channels form
where:
• There is a plentiful supply
of sand and gravel from
upstream.
• Discharge varies widely
between flood and low water.
• The river gradient is steep.
Deltas
•A delta is an area of flat land
formed at the mouth of a
river where:
• A large volume of sediment
is deposited.
• The sea is relatively calm
and not too deep.
• There is a small tidal range.
•The river divides into
distributaries as it crosses the
delta. Lagoons may form
between the distributaries.
The Nile delta