Agents of Erosion. Erosion The process by which water, ice, wind or gravity moves fragments of rock and soil.

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Agents of Erosion

Erosion

• The process by which water, ice, wind or gravity moves fragments of rock and soil.

Water Erosion

• Rivers, streams, and runoff

Ice Erosion

• Glaciers

Wind Erosion

Mass Movements

• Landslides, mudslides, slump and creep

landslide clip.mpeg

Shoreline Erosion

• Erosion- the removal and transport of material by wind, water or ice

• Weathering- the breakdown of rock into smaller and smaller pieces by mechanical or chemical means

• Deposition- materials are dropped

Wave Deposits

• Waves can carry materials, including sand, rock fragments, and shells.

• Beach- any area of the shoreline made up of material deposited by waves– Not all beaches are the same

Wave Angles

• The way sand moves depends on the angle of the waves on the shore

• Waves come to shore at an angle

• Waves normally leave in an angle perpendicular to the shore

• Longshore current- water near and parallel to the shoreline

Wave AnglesSand Movement

Longshore Current

Wave Direction

Wave Angles- Diagram

Wind Erosion

Has wind ever blown your papers?

• You already know how wind erosion works!

Take cover!

• Loose rock material

• Deserts

• Coastlines

– Plants– Plant roots anchor (keep down) sand and soil

Wind Erosion

• Wind moves material in different ways

• Material is moved by saltation

• Saltation is the movement of sand-sized particles by skipping and bouncing in the direction of the wind

SaltationParticles roll forward or bounce in the air.

Deflation

• Deflation is the lifting and removal of sediment by wind

Deflation

Deflation

Deflation

Before After

Deflation hollows

Loess is finer than sand. It feels like powder.

Glacier

• Glacier- mass of moving ice

• 2 types– Alpine– Continental Glacier

Glacier

• Form in areas of snow on ground all year– High elevations– Polar regions

Glacier

• Snow piles up snow packs crystals• Giant ice mass• “Rivers of Ice”- begin to move (gravity)

Alpine Glaciers• Forms in mountainous areas

Valley Glacier- form in valleys with streams flowing downhill

Forms a U- shape

Continental Glacier

• Not all glaciers are “rivers of ice”

• Can spread across entire continents

• Continental glaciers- continuous masses of ice

Continental Glacier

• Continental ice sheet- largest type of glacier*– Antarctica is almost completely covered by an ice

sheet – Contains 91% of glacial ice on planet– ½ times the size of United States– It is 4,000 m thick in some places; covers

everything except highest mountain peaks

Ice Shelves

• Ice shelf- an area where ice is attached to the ice sheet but resting on open water

• Ross Ice Shelf- largest ice shelf– Attached to ice sheet covering Antarctica

Ross Shelf

Ross Shelf

Icebergs

• Large pieces of ice that break off an ice shelf

Icebergs • Large pieces of ice that break off an ice

shelf

• Icebergs form by calving

The Titanic• Most of an iceberg is below the surface

– Hazard for ships

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