Presumably you mean rocks. Well, mountains erode into rivers, which take the eroded matter downstream and deposit them into the sea. This then forms a sea bed of sand, which compresses underneath more sand to form solid rock again. This rock is then usually pushed (by tectonic movement) into new land elsewhere. Thus the cycle starts again.
Deposition by erosion , could fill a depression , the same erosion creates depressions.
The absolute age of rock is determined by the amount of radioactive decay, not by the rate of erosion and deposition.
Drumlins are caused by both erosion and deposition. These drumlins are found in the lowlands of Scotland and are small egg shaped hills.
The Arkansas River was formed by erosion, not deposition.
Glacial erosion is the process by which a glacial flows over the land, picking up rocks. Glacial deposition is the process by which a glacier gathers a huge amount of rock and soil as it Erodes the land in the path
answer is deposition and erosion~
Processes affecting the surface of the Earth and part of the Rock Cycle.
by weathering
The process of erosion (removal of material) is not the same as the process of deposition (the adding of material). As they are two separate processes, deposition is not a part of the overall erosion process. However, without eroded sediments, there would be nothing to deposit, the two processes are therefore sequential (and part of the overall encompassing rock cycle processes).
neither
The part of the erosion process in which sediment is placed in a new location, or deposited.
weathering,erosion, and deposition
Delta is deposition beach is deposition canyon is erosion sea cave is erosion sand dune is deposition
Erosion transports weathered material from all three rock types in the rock cycle to a point of deposition where it can lithify into sedimentary rock.
weathering then erosion ,then deposition
A desert is both erosion and deposition.
Weathering, erosion, and deposition.