Yes. The evidence that scientist have that erosion works slowly over a long period of time is that Arizona is the result of close to three million years of erosion.
The evidence that scientist have that erosion works slowly over a long period of time is that Arizona is the result of close to three million years of erosion.
The evidence that scientist have that erosion works slowly over a long period of time is that Arizona is the result of close to three million years of erosion.
An example is the shore pushing and pulling sand, taking some and moving it everytime.A rhyme to remember:weathering breaks it, erosion takes it, and deposition places it on the ground.
•The key to erosion is something called "fluid flow." Water, air, and even ice are fluids because they tend to flow from one place to another due to the force of gravity. Of the three, liquid water is the most common agent of erosion because there's so much of it on the surface of the Earth .
The Earth's gravitational pull on the ice in a glacier forces it to flow like a river (but much more slowly). As it does so the hard lower surface of the ice grinds away at the rock beneath.Wind-blown rain, snow or hail, or even just air against hills or rocks, will tend to loosen and blow away particles to cause erosion. Without gravity the air, et cetera would simply drift off into outer space (as would you and I!).
The evidence that scientist have that erosion works slowly over a long period of time is that Arizona is the result of close to three million years of erosion.
The evidence that scientist have that erosion works slowly over a long period of time is that Arizona is the result of close to three million years of erosion.
The verb in this sentence is "works." It is the action word that describes what the subject (he) is doing.
Tateyama Sabō Erosion Control Works Service Train was created in 1929.
Yes, very. Ice erosion works like this; water gets into the cracks in an element, and freezes, and as it's freezing it expands. When it expands, it burrows a little further down than before, and this continues until the element splits. Water erosion: Fast rushing water runs past an element, and slowly takes minuscule sediments along with it, until the element wears away to nothing.
they have tried to stop erosion buy pooping in the soil it works
It works by growing
slowly almost at a crawl
deposition
i don't no soz
An unusually rainy period can cause rivers to overflow their banks and flood the areas surrounding them. The erosion, caused by rivers, can happen very quick.
Very slowly.. pretty boring stuff if you ask me