Gravitational displacement or erosion .
The type of erosion that occurs when gravity alone causes rock or sediment to move down a slope is called mass movement. The types of mass movement are creep, slump, rock slides, and mudflows.
Gravity (slope) and resistance.
i would assume gravity? a slope is downhill, so if rocks are loose they will naturally travel downwards.
Mass wasting or mass movement refers to the movement of rock debris down a slope due to the influence of gravity. The movement is induced by natural factors or by human interferance on hill slope. The movement can be slow or fast.
Because of the force of gravity.
the stepper the slope the the more power gravity has. gravity doesn't reduce friction it's just stronger then friction when slope or surface is steeper. For example gravity is not strong enough to pull things through the floor of your house because their is no slope. It also depends on the mass of the oblect because the bigger the mass the more gravity can pull on
Sounds like a landslide, mass wasting, slope movement, or other forms of gravity induced erosion.
Yes it does ones its generated through a down slope movement under the influence of gravity.
The most common action is called a landslide.In freeze-thaw climates, the term solifluction includes movement down a slope.In catastrophic water release, the flow of a muddy mix is called a lahar.In soil and in lava, this type of flow may be called creep.
the steeper the slope, the faster the velocity because the pull of gravity will be applied more since the resistance will be lower.
The force of gravity on object can differ because of its slope. An object can pick up quick acceleration at a steep slope due to the force of gravity than normal slopes. We say that gravity is force of attraction between the body and the surface of the earth. at a slope gravity attracts the object to itself. The gravitational force is 9.8N. when gravity attracts the object to itself than for sure the object will gain acceleration but the acceleration rate of the object will differ by the slope that it has been pulled.
The overall process is called Solifluction. If you imagine single particle (in the soil) on a gentle slope. When the water in the soil freezes, it expands and forces the particle away from the slope at right angles to the slope. When the ice then thaws gravity will cause the particle to settle back but the movement will be in a downwards direction, not in the direction it first moved. Add this movement together, repeate season after season and the particle gradually moves down slope.