Erosion due to cold temperatures will happen at 32 F or below, as long as the temperature eventually risies above 32 F. This is erosion due to the freeze-thaw cycle. There are also forms of erosion that result from weather and from water movement, and these forms can occure at any temperature, warm or cold.
up your booty ////glaciers are a good example
In the outside of the meander there is mostly erosion that is found because that is where the highest energy and velocity occurs. This energy and velocity causes the bank to undercut and collapse. On top of that the river bed becomes deeper as time passes.
Erosion increases when there is a flood and when land is plowed and there is no cover crop that would prevent wind erosion.
The four types or mechanisms of erosion are rill erosion, gully erosion, stream bank erosion, and sheet erosion. In sheet erosion a thin layer of the surface is removed. In rill erosion, small rivulets of running water gather together and cut small channels. In gully erosion, rills enlarge to form bigger channels too large to be removed by normal tillage. Finally, streambank erosion is the washing away of soil from banks of streams and rivers. Erosion is a natural, continuous process, but agricultural practices can speed erosion, resulting in lost soil, lost soil fertility, air pollution, and water pollution. Wind and water are the main agents that move soil.
erosion is the process which are not available in my mind .hu lalaaa
Erosion is the process by which the surface of the earth is worn away by the action of water,wind, etc. Erosion happens mostly on mountains.
No. There are many contributing factors to erosion.
erosion
If erosion didnt happen we wouldn't have canyons or montains or hills, but yes erosion is important.
coastal erosion
Erosion happens everywhere, if not from rain, from wind. So yes.
erosion
the crust layer.
Yes
Sorry cold not find that answer
What will happen to gum is it will feel cold. Nothing! Will happen to gum but you can try!
When sediment from erosion and weathering of rocks falls or lands somewhere.