bearem
bearem
Rain can carry various pollutants such as dust, pollen, soil particles, and minerals. These particles can be carried by rain over long distances before being deposited on the ground.
The debris of boulders and coarse material carried by glaciers is known as moraine. Moraines can be found at the edge, sides, and base of glaciers and are deposited as the glacier moves and melts. They can vary in size and shape depending on the glacier's movement and the type of material being transported.
Erosion is the process of wearing away rocks and soil, creating sediment that can be carried by wind, water, or ice. Deposition occurs when this sediment is dropped or deposited in a new location. Erosion is necessary before deposition because it is the source of the sediment that is being moved and eventually deposited.
Spits form as a result of deposition by longshore drift, which is the movement of sand along the coast by the waves. The spit is formed when any material that is being carried by the waves gets deposited due to a loss of the waves energy, this could be because of a change of wind direction, or an estuary in the opposing direction slowing it down. As time progresses the deposited material forms a spit.
Three ways rock erodes include:Mechanical and chemical weatheringTransportation of the weathered particles to another location.WindIceWaterGravityWays rocks are deposited include:WindIceWaterGravity
Coarse sediment, such as gravel and larger particles, is typically deposited first in a stream channel due to its heavier weight and inability to remain suspended in the flowing water for extended periods of time. Finer sediment, like sand and silt, may be carried further downstream before being deposited.
Most commonly as Carbon dioxide, but it is also released as elemental carbon, usually as a fine powder, which is often carried many miles by our atmosphere, before being deposited all over the earth.
By being first weathered into loose material (clast), then transported, then deposited, and then consolidated.
The object being moved by a machine is typically referred to as the "workpiece" or the "work material." It can be a raw material, a part being processed, or a finished product depending on the specific operation being carried out by the machine.
I would consider tiny pieces of rock carried by water to be sediment. Sediment is generally clay or sand particles, but any type of rock ground into fine particles can be carried by water. This may include igneous-type rocks (those that come from around volcanoes and the bottom of the ocean).
Spits form as a result of deposition by longshore drift, which is the movement of sand along the coast by the waves. The spit is formed when any material that is being carried by the waves gets deposited due to a loss of the waves energy, this could be because of a change of wind direction, or an estuary in the opposing direction slowing it down. As time progresses the deposited material forms a spit. Sediment for example at a mouth of a river is carried along the beach due to pravialling wind (when the wind blows the sea in a horizontal direction) the sediment is carried backwards and forwards called swash and backwash, over time the sediment can build up to form a landform such as a spit, along the edge of a bay. which usually have a hooked end.