Sand dunes.
It forms some surface features of the Earth.
Some common surface features formed by water erosion include valleys, canyons, river channels, and waterfalls. Water erosion can also create features like meanders and deltas in river systems, as well as coastal cliffs and caves along the coastline.
Mountains can be formed by erosion!
They weather away rocks and form some surface features of the Earth.
Some shoreline features formed by erosion include sea cliffs, sea arches, sea caves, and wave-cut platforms. Erosion by waves, currents, and wind gradually wears away the coastline, shaping these distinctive landforms over time.
Underground erosion can form caves, sinkholes, and underground rivers. Deposition can result in formations such as stalactites, stalagmites, and flowstone.
Wind erosion can create surface features such as sand dunes, ventifacts (rocks shaped by abrasion), and yardangs (elongated ridges). These features are typically found in arid or semi-arid regions where wind is a dominant erosional force.
ytytytytytytytytytyt
river deltas
ytytytytytytytytytyt
Erosion and abrasion carve shoreline features.
Some features formed by underground erosion and deposition include caves, sinkholes, underground rivers, karst landscapes, and stalactites/stalagmites. These formations are typically found in areas with soluble rock formations such as limestone, where water can dissolve the rock over time and create unique underground features.