No, the solids the water carries is the sediment.
It is called deposition. It occurs as friction or gravity overcomes the force of the moving water.
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When rain runoff travels over the surface of the land and enters a stream, it is called surface runoff. This water can carry pollutants and sediment into the stream, affecting water quality and aquatic ecosystems.
sediment
estuary
Sediment that is carried by a stream along the bottom of its channel.
Particles that settle from water are called sediment.
Generally, the highest percentage of the annual sediment load moved by a stream consists of suspended sediment. These are particles like silt and clay that are carried within the stream's water column. Bedload sediment, which is sediment that is moved along the stream bed through rolling or sliding, typically makes up a smaller percentage of the total annual sediment load.
1. The dry bed of a stream 2. Waste water 3. The erosion of sediment or sediment that has been eroded
The sediment that moves along the bed of a stream is called bedload. Bedload consists of larger particles such as sand, gravel, and boulders that are transported by rolling, sliding, or bouncing along the streambed.
Deposition is dominant in areas of a stream where the flow rate decreases, such as at the inner bends of a meander or near the mouth of the stream where it enters a larger body of water. In these locations, the stream has less energy to transport sediment, leading to deposition of the sediment it is carrying.
A decrease in stream velocity due to factors such as a decrease in slope or widening of the stream channel can cause sediment to be deposited. When the stream's capacity to transport sediment is exceeded, it drops the sediment it was carrying. Additionally, changes in the stream's flow rate or turbulence levels can also result in sediment deposition.