Geography

Cards (117)

  • What is a drainage basin?

    An area of land drained by a river and its tributaries
  • What is the source of a river?
    The start of the river
  • What is a tributary?

    A small stream that joins a larger river
  • What is the channel of a river?
    The path where the river flows
  • What is a confluence?
    The point where a tributary joins a larger river
  • What is a watershed?

    The edge of a river basin
  • What is the mouth of a river?

    The end of the river where it meets the sea
  • What are the long and cross profiles of a typical river?
    • Long profile: shows the gradient from source to mouth
    • Cross profile: shows the shape of the valley from one side to the other
  • How does the gradient of a river change from source to mouth?
    The gradient starts steep and reduces with distance from the source
  • What is a V-shaped valley?
    A valley formed by vertical erosion, typically found in the upper course of a river
  • What is the river load?
    The material transported by a river
  • What are meanders?
    Bends in a river that are mainly found in lowland areas
  • What causes meanders to migrate across the valley floor?
    The erosion on the outside bend and deposition on the inside bend
  • What is an oxbow lake?

    A lake formed when a meander is cut off from the river
  • What are the four types of erosion in rivers?
    1. Hydraulic action
    2. Abrasion
    3. Attrition
    4. Solution
  • What is hydraulic action?
    The process of water smashing against river banks
  • What is abrasion in river erosion?
    The grinding of pebbles along the river bank and bed
  • What is attrition?

    The process where rocks carried by the river knock against each other to become smaller and rounder
  • What is solution in the context of river erosion?
    The process where water dissolves certain types of rocks, such as limestone
  • What are the four types of transportation in rivers?
    1. Traction
    2. Saltation
    3. Suspension
    4. Solution
  • What is traction in river transportation?
    The rolling of large heavy pebbles along the riverbed
  • What is saltation?

    The bouncing of smaller pebbles along the riverbed
  • What is suspension in river transportation?
    The carrying of lighter sediment within the water
  • What is solution in the context of river transportation?
    The transport of dissolved chemicals in water
  • What is river deposition?
    • Occurs when the velocity of the river decreases
    • Sediment is deposited when there is not enough energy to carry it
  • Where does the largest amount of river deposition occur?
    At the mouth of the river
  • What are interlocking spurs?

    Landforms created by a river winding around areas of resistant rock
  • How do waterfalls form?
    When hard rock overhangs softer rock, leading to undercutting and retreat
  • What is a gorge?
    A narrow, steep-sided valley found downstream of a retreating waterfall
  • What are the ways gorges can form?
    • Melting glaciers pouring off upland areas
    • Erosion by rivers over time
  • What is the slip-off slope in a river?
    The inside bend of a meander where deposition occurs
  • What is the thalweg?

    The line of fastest current in a river that swings from side to side
  • What happens when a river's thalweg causes erosion on the outside bend?

    It causes meanders to migrate across the valley floor
  • What are floodplains and levees?
    • Floodplains: wide flat areas on either side of a river created by migrating meanders and floods
    • Levees: raised banks formed by sediment deposition
  • Where is the River Tees located?
    In the North-East of England
  • What is the source of the River Tees?
    In the Pennines
  • What factors increase flood risk?
    Precipitation, geology, and relief
  • What are the human factors that increase flood risk?
    • Urbanization: impermeable surfaces increase runoff
    • Deforestation: reduces evaporation and increases runoff
    • Agriculture: leaves soil exposed, leading to surface runoff
  • What is a flood hydrograph?
    A graph showing how a river's discharge changes after rainfall
  • What does lag time refer to in a flood hydrograph?
    The time that passes between peak rainfall and peak discharge