Deposition The erosional transport of material through the landscape is rarely continuous. Instead, we find that particles may undergo repeated cycles of entrainment, transport, and deposition. Transport depends on an appropriate balance of forces within the transporting medium. A reduction in the velocity of the medium, or an increase in the resistance of the particles may upset this balance and cause deposition. Reductions in competence can occur in a variety of ways. Velocity can be reduced locally by the sheltering effect of large rocks, hills, stands of vegetation or other obstructions. Normally, competence changes occur because of large scale reductions in the velocity of flowing medium. For wind, reductions in velocity can be related to variations in spatial heating and cooling which create pressure gradients and wind. In water, lower velocities can be caused by reductions in discharge or a change in the grade of the stream. Glacial flows of ice can become slower if precipitation input is reduced or when the ice encounters melting. Deposition can also be caused by particle precipitation and flocculation. Both of these processes are active only in water. Precipitation is a process where dissolved ions become solid because of changes in the temperature or chemistry of the water. Flocculation is a chemical process where salt causes the aggregation of minute clay particles into larger masses that are too heavy to remain suspended.
They all cause the Earth's surface to change.
Weathering erosion and deposition are related because they all happen in a cycle.
Deposition does the job of placing sediment in a new location.
they both carry sediments from one place to another.
Beans beans they're good for your heart the more you eat the more you fart ;d
The stuff that is eroded away (dirt) has to end up somewhere else (deposition).
I don't care I love it
By Gary
how is hurricane related to weathering
mechanical weathering and chemical weathering are related because their both are types of weathering
Water cycle removes top soil. It decreases the fertility of soil.
How does slope affect the rate of weathering
It is an example of erosion. See link to related question below.
how is hurricane related to weathering
by weathering
they all make earths feautures
Tornadoes often bring down trees, which can increase soil erosion. On rare occasions tornadoes can directly scour away the topsoil as well. Overall, tornadoes are not significant contributors to erosion and deposition.
Weathering breaks up the substance, and erosion causes it to move.
Erosion and deposition have an amazingly close relationship. Erosion and depositions are the exact opposites of each other in terms of land.
Weathering can cause erosion if no safety measures are taken.
Tornadoes do cause some soil erosion, though it is rarely significant. Eroded material must eventually by deposited, but this does not occur by any mechanism directly related to tornadoes.
rocks get brocken down into soil from erosion
Weathering occurs when rocks are broken down into smaller particles but not moved When natural forces begin to move weathered particles, called sediments, we say that they are being eroded, or undergoing erosion. Most of earth's erosion is done by flowing water in streams which carry tons of sediment to the oceans each day Deposition occurs when movement slows or stops and suspended sediments are dropped.
Erosion and weathering.
Erosion causes the movement of material down hill. Weathering usually leaves the material being effected in place.