Most gorges are formed through water erosion. For example, waterfalls erode the rocks they fall over and the falls move gradually back - leaving a gorge behind them. Some gorges are formed as rift valleys; land stretches and a central area drops down - this has formed the Great Rift Valley in Africa and the Great Glen in Scotland.
A gorge is formed only by erosion, and by, thus-far, a lack of mass movement. The gorge owes its existence to the vertical erosion of the river which flows through it.
a small canion
Erosion and deposition can lead to the formation of sedimentary rock.
first the weathering happens which causes an erosion which makes deposition.
When deposition finally seals off the cutoff from the river channel, an oxbow lake is formed.
It is a Deposition.
Drumlin is the result of deposition and not erosion. It refers to a long, low hill of sediments deposited by a glacier.
deposition
erosion
erosion
Erosion
Erosion and deposition can lead to the formation of sedimentary rock.
I don't think they are, deposition is the settling down of sediments that had been carried by erosion. Deposition is how deltas and alluvial fans are created. However erosion is the process of moving weathered sediments to a new location. So, a way deposition and erosion are similar is that they are in the same process. Weathering -> Erosion -> Deposition
Delta is deposition beach is deposition canyon is erosion sea cave is erosion sand dune is deposition
Tectonic plate collision.
Waters role is to carry out the process and is the force the creates erosion and deposition.&created by Austin Nelson from Stirling School.
i think they were created by the movement of the earthcrust
weathering then erosion ,then deposition
A desert is both erosion and deposition.