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UK Landscapes
Rivers
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Cards (33)
Levees
Embankments
of sediment along the bank of a river, formed naturally by regular
flooding
and can be built up by people to protect against flooding
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Flood plain
The relatively flat area forming the
valley
floor on either side of the river
channel.
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Gorge
A narrow,
steep
sided valley often formed when a
waterfall
retreats upstream
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Erosion
The removal of weathered
sediment
by the force of the
river
water
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Attrition
the material being carried by the river
knocks
against one another causing it to become
smaller
and rounder
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Hydraulic Action
The sheer force of the
water
hitting the
bed
and banks
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Abrasion
The load
repeatedly
hits the
bed
and banks, a sandpapering effect that deepens and widens channel over time.
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Solution
When river
water
flows over soluble rocks they become part of the water as they are
dissolved
by it.
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Traction
the
largest
material is rolled along the bed of the river at times of
high
discharge
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Saltation
A
leapfrogging
movement as small stones and grains of
sand
bounce along the river bed
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Suspension
The finest material,
clay
, is carried within the
water.
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Lateral Erosion
The direction of erosion by the river that is
sideways.
It becomes more dominant in middle and
lower
course.
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Vertical Erosion
The direction of erosion by the river that is downwards. It is dominant in the
upper
course of a river
valley.
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Deposition
When material is dumped by the river at times of low discharge or when the
carrying capacity
of the water is
exceeded.
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Erosion
The wearing away of the
landscape
by the movement of the
river
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Transportation
The movement of
sediment
by the
river.
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Hydrograph
shows the
discharge
of a river, related to a
rainfall event
, over a period of time.
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Flood plain zoning
An attempt to
organise
land use so that the land nearest the river that
floods
most often is not built on
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Flood relief channels
New
artificial
channels that are used when a river is close to maximum discharge to take the
pressure
of the main channel and so reduce the flood risk.
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Embankments
Raised banks
constructed along the channel so that they make the river
deeper
so it can hold more water.
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Hard Engineering
Building
artificial structures
using materials such as rock, concrete and steel, to reduce, disrupt or stop the impact of
river processes.
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Soft Engineering
The use of the
natural environment
surrounding a river, using schemes that work in
harmony
with the rivers natural processes.
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Interlocking Spurs
A series of
ridges
of land projecting out on alternate sides of the
valley
around which the river winds.
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Meander
A pronounced
bend
in a river
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Ox-bow lake
An
arc-shaped
lake which has been cut off from a
meandering
river
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Waterfall .
A sudden descent of a river over a very
steep slope
in its bed. Usually where a river meets a band of relatively
softer rock
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Estuary
The tidal
mouth
of a river where it meets the sea, wide banks of deposited mud are exposed at
low
tide.
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Fluvial Processes
Processes relating to
erosion
, transport and
deposition
by a river.
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Lagtime
The time taken from
peak rainfall
to when
peak discharge
occurs, in hours.
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Baseflow
the normal day to day discharge of the river and is the consequence of
groundwater
seeping into the river
channel.
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Interception
The temporary storage of
water
on
vegetation
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Infiltration
The movement of
water
from the surface into the
soil
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Discharge
the volume of
water
passing a given point at a given time in
cubic metres per second.
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