GLACIATION and RIVERS REVISION

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GLACIATION and RIVERS REVISION. Revise: how features formed How to id on a map Land use Gathering techniques. Using the following description, draw the feature that is being explained. The river is meandering across the valley, (b) the river is eroding laterally (from side to side), - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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GLACIATION and RIVERS REVISION

Revise: how features formedHow to id on a mapLand useGathering techniques

(a)The river is meandering across the valley,(b) the river is eroding laterally (from side to side), (c) the river erodes the outside of the bends and deposits on

the inside so its course is changing, (d) this erosion narrows the neck of the meander (e) often during a flood the river will cut through the neck, (f) the river continues in the new bed and the meander is

abandoned, (g) new deposition seals off the ends and the cut-off

becomes an ox-bow lake.

Using the following description, draw the feature that is being explained.

(a) River flows over an area where there are bands of softer and harder rocks,

(b) softer rock is more quickly eroded, (c) the river undercuts the harder rock leaving an

overhang, (d) the river forms a plunge pool below the waterfall, (e) overhanging rock is unsupported and falls into the

plunge pool, (f) the waterfall is moved upstream, (g) as this process continues a gorge is cut back into the

hillside.

Using the diagrams, explain how the feature was formed

River Cliff

Flood Plain

V-shaped Valley

Source

Estuary

Interlocking Spurs

River beach

Ox-bow lake

Levee

Waterfall

Meander

Gorge

LOOKING AT RIVERS ON AN O.S. MAP

You may be asked to describe the physical features of a river an an OS map. The following points should be referred to in your answer: Examine the course of the river – is

it straight or meandering? Is it in the upper, middle or lower section?

What direction is the river flowing in?

Look at the valley shape – is it V-shaped or is the river in its floodplain (contour lines will tell you)

Look at contour lines to work out the river’s speed eg if a river is flowing along flat ground, speed will be fairly slow.

Pick out features of the river eg meanders, ox-bow lakes, waterfall etc … quote 6-fig grid references.

Describe the PHYSICAL features of the River Clyde and its Valley on the between 774530 and 737560 map extract. 4 marks G03

Clyde in this section is a winding/meandering river, generally flowing SE to NW

There are a number of lakes which may indicate drainage problems

Gentle gradient (no contour lines) Valley floor/flood plain very wide (up to 0.5km) Valley sides gentler on the NW. Valley sides rise from 30 m to 100m

Describe the PHYSICAL features of the River Clyde and its Valley on the map extract.

4 marks

Describe the physical features of the River Tees AND its valley from Basselton Wood to the road bridge circled.

4 marks

What are you looking at?

What do they tell you about the river?

What should I have mentioned?

Both the valley and river

Wide meanders, wide river in lower course, embankments to prevent flooding, abandoned meanders at Ox bow lake, tidal after barrage, wide floodplain further downstream

The Rivers Dee and Allt an t-Slugin and their valleys are very different.

Describe these differences in detail. 4 marks C03

The River Dee is much wider than Allt being over 50 metres wide

The floor of the River Dee is wide and flat, whereas the Allt is more V-shaped valley

A large area of the floodplain of the River Dee is marshy land

The Allt has a steeper gradient than the Dee, so probably flows faster

The Dee flows east, while the Allt flows south east The Dee has steep slopes on the south side of the valley

but the land on both sides of the Allt are very steep

The Rivers Dee and Allt an t-Slugin and their valleys are very different. Describe these differences in detail. 4 marks C03

Glaciation revision:

With the aid of annotated diagrams describe and explain the processes involved in the formation of glaciated features, both erosional and depositional

Erosional Processes

Erosion Processes

Involve movement

Weathering Processes

happen in situ (one place)

Plucking

Mountain

Glacier

Plucking happens when glacial Plucking happens when glacial ice freezes and sticks to rock.ice freezes and sticks to rock.

When the glacier moves, large When the glacier moves, large angular pieces of rock are angular pieces of rock are pulled/plucked away with it.pulled/plucked away with it.

Plucking

steepens the

Backwall.

Maximum erosion occurs where the weight of ice is

the greatest

AbrasionRocks carried by a glacier act like sandpaper, on a giant scale, rubbing against and wearing away the sides and floor of the valley. This leads to the valley getting steeper, deeper and wider. The bedrock is polished smooth by the ice as it moves across it.

Rocks carried by the glacier grind at the

base and sides of valley

Where the rocks scrape the rock

striations are formed

Where the ice flows over the rock

it is polished

Freeze Thaw Weathering

Formation of a corrie

a) snow collects in hollowsb) snow compacts to icec) ice moves under gravity, lubricated by meltwaterd) ice rotates to lipe) abrasion deepens corrief) plucking steepens back and sidesg) corrie lochan (tarn) may fill hollow.

Formation of an arete

Steep sided ridges which formed as the hollow deepened to form the corries.Frost shattering further sharpened the ridges leaving them rocky and jagged.

Formation of a pyramidal peak

Steep sided frost isolated summits are formed when the backwall of 3 or more corries converge, mainly due to plucking action

Formation of a U-shaped valley The v-shaped valley

is filled by a glacier The glacier abrades

the valley sides and plucks at the valley floors

The interlocking spurs become steep sided truncated spurs

When the glacier reteats/melts a misfit stream or ribbon lake is left behind

Former tributaries become hanging valleys

Depositional landforms

lateral andmedial moraine

ground moraine

snout

terminal moraine

outwash sand and gravel

glacial depositionfluvioglacial deposition

Terminal or end moraine, is found at the front of the glacier and marks the furthest extent of the advance of the glacier.

Debris is pushed at the snout of the glacier and extends across trough.

It is made up of unsorted clay, sand and rocks.

MORAINES Pieces of rock picked up by glaciers are called moraines

The steep side faces the ice movement.

Drumlins are smooth, elongated mounds of ground moraine or till which has been deposited by the ice but shaped while the ice was still moving.

Drumlins often occur in swarms or groups.

Terminal Moraine

Drumlin

Kettle Hole

Esker

Outwash Plain

Till

Sorted sands and gravels

description - This is a meandering ridge if sand and gravel.explanation - This feature is formed of sand and gravel deposited on the bed of a river flowing beneath the ice.