Ultimately the ocean, although depositional environments on land can make this a very long process.
Answer: No one can know the ultimate fate of eroded material. It could end up in an ocean and be subducted by plate tectonics and melt, becoming part of the upper mantle or crust, depending on what direction it takes. Eventually, as Earth cools, if it has formed into a sedimentary, metamorphic, or igneous rock, it may stay that way when the planet becomes geologically inactive. Or, billions of years from now, the eroded material may wind up as interstellar dust when the sun expands and consumes Earth in its fiery death. We'll never know.
eroded materials can end up in deltas oceans and more
deposition
sedimentation
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Erosion, transportation of the eroded material, deposition of this material then lithification.
metabolization
probably somethin due to gravity or something like that
The eroded particles may be carried by water, wind or ice to other locations like the lowland regions or into the ocean and lakes.The eroded materials build up and under their own pressure gradually become hardened into sedimentary rock.
Eroded soil can enter drains and waterways, causing them to build up with sediment.
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sedimentation
it drowns.
Deflation
igneous rock and it became sand
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Igneous Rock
It is made up of Stone from taha
The harder a material is, the less it will be eroded by mechanic forces like wind and water. Eroded material from one place can also gather another place and form a protective layer.
Erosion, transportation of the eroded material, deposition of this material then lithification.