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Wearing away of rock by grinding action. |
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A fan-shaped wedge of sediment that typically accumulates on land where a stream emerges from a steep canyon onto a flat area. In map view it has the shape of an open fan. Typically forms in arid or semiarid climates. |
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The lower limit of erosion by a stream. Sea level is the ultimate base level. However, lakes can serve as a temporary base level in upstream areas. |
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The larger, heavier particles that are being transported by a stream. Instead of being dissolved or suspended, these are being rolled or bounced along, spending at least part of their time in contact with the stream bottom. See also: load, suspended load, dissolved load. |
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A measure of the total amount of sediment in a stream and the size of the particles being moved by the stream. |
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A deposit of sediment that forms where a stream enters a standing body of water such as a lake or ocean. The name is derived from the Greek letter "delta" because these deposits typically have a triangular shape in map view. |
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The volume of water flowing past a given point in a stream at a given time. |
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A ridge that separates two adjacent drainage basins. |
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Drainage basin or watershed [image] |
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Area of land surface drained by a river system. |
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A sudden rush of water, usually caused by a single cloudburst over the narrrow valley of a young mountain stream. |
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An area of alluvium-covered, relatively level land along the banks of a stream that is covered with water when the stream leaves its channel during a time of high flow. |
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A minature valley formed by erosion from heavy rains. |
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The wearing away of land at the head of a gully or stream valley |
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A long continuous ridge built by people along the banks of a stream to contain the water during times of high flow. Natural levees can also be built along the banks of a stream. When the flood water decelerates upon leaving the channel, sediments quickly drop out of suspension and build a ridge over time. |
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One of a series of broad, looping bends in a stream. |
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A crescent-shaped lake that forms when a meandering stream changes course. Such changes in course frequently occur during flood events when overbank waters erode a new channel. |
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A cylindrical or hemispherical hold in the bedrock of a stream that is formed from the continual swirling motion of sand and gravel by swirling currents. |
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A chemical weathering process in which a material is dissolved. Also, the transport of dissolved ions by the water of a stream. |
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The diversion of the upper part of one stream by the headward growth of another stream. |
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The state in which rock materials carried by a river are stirred up and kept from sinking by the turbulence of stream flow |
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A pass in a mountain ridge through which a stream flows. |
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