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Usually by erosion, although weathered rocks can split off to trigger a slide. A landslide is the downhill motion of loose rock and soil, sometimes entire layers of a mountainside.
the examplesof soil erosins are mining and landslide
A Landslide is a large proportion of mud/rock that gives way under a lot of water/pressure which will literally slide down the face it is based upon. Erosion is only in small amounts, it is not recorded as a large break away at once, or for deposition the same story
Delta is deposition beach is deposition canyon is erosion sea cave is erosion sand dune is deposition
A desert is both erosion and deposition.
When soil moves from one location to another location, it is being eroded in the location that it is leaving, and it is being deposited in the location where it is arriving. Hence, a landslide is both deposition and erosion.
No, they are examples of deposition, not erosion.
Please help me answer this SO hard question for science!
Usually by erosion, although weathered rocks can split off to trigger a slide. A landslide is the downhill motion of loose rock and soil, sometimes entire layers of a mountainside.
the examplesof soil erosins are mining and landslide
A Landslide is a large proportion of mud/rock that gives way under a lot of water/pressure which will literally slide down the face it is based upon. Erosion is only in small amounts, it is not recorded as a large break away at once, or for deposition the same story
Delta is deposition beach is deposition canyon is erosion sea cave is erosion sand dune is deposition
A desert is both erosion and deposition.
weathering then erosion ,then deposition
Both erosion and deposition.
Weathering, erosion, and deposition.
first the weathering happens which causes an erosion which makes deposition.