erosion
Transportation.
The process by which weathered materials are carried away is called erosion. Erosion can be caused by various agents such as water, wind, ice, or gravity, which transport the weathered materials from their original location to a new destination. Over time, erosion can reshape the Earth's surface by wearing down rocks and moving sediment to different areas.
Respiration is the process that carries oxygen to the cells and removes carbon dioxide from them. Blood carries the oxygen to the cells.
erosion
Glacier
Erosion
erosion
The air sometimes carries sand and hits rocks, wearing it away.
Rocks are worn away through the process of weathering and erosion. Weathering is the breaking down of rocks into smaller pieces while erosion is what carries the rock to new places. Rocks can be worn away by water, ice, and wind. Examples of this are abrasion, ice wedging, and dissolution.
Wind can wear away rocks through a process called abrasion, where small particles carried by the wind collide with rock surfaces, gradually eroding and smoothing them over time. The force of the wind, combined with the particles it carries, can break down rocks into smaller pieces through repeated impacts, resulting in their weathering and erosion.
Erosion is the gradational force that carries away broken pieces of rocks through processes like water, wind, and ice. These processes gradually wear down rocks and transport the broken pieces to new locations, shaping the Earth's surface over time.
Strong winds can cause weathering by physically breaking down rocks and carrying away the small particles. As the wind carries sand and other debris, it can abrade and erode exposed surfaces of rocks over time. This process is known as abrasion.