Eroded soil washes away and winds up in rivers, and eventually in lakes or oceans where is becomes sediment at the bottom. Rocks can be eroded into sand. Generally, they remain part of the soil, until the soil is eroded.
Eroded soil can enter drains and waterways, causing them to build up with sediment.
Alluvial soil is often made up of topsoil that eroded from land upstream.
Yes when leaves fall to the ground after a while they break down and end up into the soil.
They don't really. Tornadoes are an erosive force, though significant erosion is rare. The soil or sediment picked up by a tornadoes does eventually get deposited, as does all eroded material, but not as a direct result of any process from the tornado itself.
Eroded soil washes away and winds up in rivers, and eventually in lakes or oceans where is becomes sediment at the bottom. Rocks can be eroded into sand. Generally, they remain part of the soil, until the soil is eroded.
Eroded soil can enter drains and waterways, causing them to build up with sediment.
the tiny pieces of rock settle on the bottom of lakes,rivers and oceans
Alluvial soil is often made up of topsoil that eroded from land upstream.
Soil in flood plains is built up through the deposition of sediments carried by floodwaters. When rivers overflow their banks, they deposit sediments rich in nutrients onto the flood plain, gradually building up fertile soil layers over time. This process helps replenish nutrients, enhance soil fertility, and support the growth of vegetation in floodplain areas.
Sand represents the eroded rock of the continents.
Silt, eroded material, is small enough to be carried by water sources. Typically, a rain storm increases the amount of water flowing across a landscape and saturates the soil; the groundwater flows across the land and into bodies of water such as rivers.
Yes when leaves fall to the ground after a while they break down and end up into the soil.
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.
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The soil suffered a lot of wind damage because farmers had plowed up most of the land. A lot of it was not meant to be plowed up and the lack of rain caused it to dry up. Many farmers still went on sowing there crops and plowing up the soil. This caused the soil to form into a fine dust. During the drought there was also a lot of wind. It blew for for hours on end and without anything to hold the soil in place it blew away with the wind. This is also what caused the infamous dust storms.
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