Water flowing downhill in a large channel is called a River. Deposition creates landforms such as alluvial fans and deltas. It can also add soil to a river's fllod plain.
It's a river
Water flowing downhill in a large channel is called a River. Deposition creates landforms such as alluvial fans and deltas. It can also add soil to a river's fllod plain.
Water flowing downhill in a large channel is called a River. Deposition creates landforms such as alluvial fans and deltas. It can also add soil to a river's fllod plain.
A channel through which water is continually flowing downhill is a stream. A large channel in soil that carries runoff after a rainstorm is a gully.
Water flowing downhill across the surface of the Earth is called runoff.
Rivers, lakes, canals, even sewers are bodies of water that flow downhill in a channel.
Runoff is the water flowing downhill across the surface of the Earth.
sheetflow
Water flowing downhill as a thin sheet is called sheet flow
Water flowing downhill does not require energy, only the force of gravity.
A channel where water is continuously flowing down a hill would be described as a stream, or possibly a rivulet, depending on its size.
Yes, it does. A glacier is a river of ice flowing downhill, just like a river of water flows downhill but slower.