Water erosion, mostly by streams and rivers that have a high gradient and discharge.
It depends on what type of discharge. If the discharge is blood, then of course it is normal.
Yes. You get discharge before you get your period.
The laws of science can never change, however our understanding of how they work may change as our understanding increases or we discover flaws in the theories
Have to much water flow
All the time.
Q-Tips
a streams discharge is the excess water from a storm or melted snow.
true
When a stream's discharge increases, erosive energy increases.
When the discharge of a stream increases, so does it's velocity. When it decreases, so does the velocity.
the competence and capacity of a steam depend on a streams velocity and discharge. Because the velocity and discharge of a given stream are not constant , the competence and capacity of a stream are not constant . competence and capacity vary along a stream and change throughout the year.
The discharge of a river is the discharge that the river puts out into the sea. This is often the finer silt that the river has picked up and carried from the upper and lower reaches of the river.
The discharge for a single stream should not change much from the headwater to the mouth. The exceptions to the mouth would be if another stream joined the main stream, which would increase the discharge or if you loose a significant amount of water to infilitration, which would decrease the discharge. The gradient should be high at the headwaters and gradually decrease downstream where it should be low at the mouth. Of course differences in lithologies or secondary streams can change the gradient for a short distance, thought the overall profile should fit the expected model.
The total volume of flow in streams is termed discharge.
Melting snow increases runoff in spring
physical change