1. it gouges out large expanses of land (for example, the formation of the Great Lakes)
2. it pushes all that land and boulders into mountains/hills
Glaciers pick up large amounts of earth as they move along the Earth's surface. Then, when they melt, they deposit all of the dirt and rock that they have picked up. This results in the reshaping of the earth's surface, as earth is removed from one place, and built up in another.
Yes, deconstructive forces like erosion contribute to reshaping and sculpting the Earth's surface by breaking down rocks and carrying sediments to new locations. While erosion may remove material from one area, it can also deposit these sediments elsewhere, helping to build up landforms like beaches, deltas, and floodplains over time.
The erosion cycle demonstrates how forces such as water, wind, and ice break down rocks and transport sediments to different locations. This process wears down the Earth's surface over time. Conversely, geological processes like deposition and sedimentation build up the Earth's surface by depositing sediments in new locations.
Weathering breaks down rocks into smaller particles, erosion transports these particles to new locations, and deposition accumulates these particles in different areas, building up Earth's surface. These processes work together continuously to shape the landscape over time.
No, deconstructive forces like erosion wear away the Earth's surface by breaking down and transporting rock and soil. It does not create new land but redistributes and changes the existing surface of the Earth.
The some times make kettle lakes and deposit till
Glaciers pick up large amounts of earth as they move along the Earth's surface. Then, when they melt, they deposit all of the dirt and rock that they have picked up. This results in the reshaping of the earth's surface, as earth is removed from one place, and built up in another.
d
Exogenous forces are forces that work above the earths surface and break down landforms. Endogenous forces are forces that work below the earths surface and build up land forms
Yes
Glaciers are forces of erosion of the land they tend to do the opposite of build it up, they wear it down. However they do deposit moraines and when they melt the land springs up a little.
Yes, deconstructive forces like erosion contribute to reshaping and sculpting the Earth's surface by breaking down rocks and carrying sediments to new locations. While erosion may remove material from one area, it can also deposit these sediments elsewhere, helping to build up landforms like beaches, deltas, and floodplains over time.
well glaciers grow and retract based on the temperature of the earth. glaciers weight a lot. A bag of ice from the party store weighs 20lbs and is less then two cubic feet of ice. Now image the weight of a block of ice that is a mile high and hundred of miles across growing. It digs into the earth and pushes it around. As it grows it picks up boulders and so on and builds things up like hills or cuts things out like lakes. Likewise as it melts and retracts it dumps things that it picked up as it was growing and got frozen in the ice.
The erosion cycle demonstrates how forces such as water, wind, and ice break down rocks and transport sediments to different locations. This process wears down the Earth's surface over time. Conversely, geological processes like deposition and sedimentation build up the Earth's surface by depositing sediments in new locations.
erosion, deposition, and weathering.....magma from volcanos (under water volcanos also) makes new land as well as the rare asteroid or comet.
Ribosomes build up proteins. They provide surface for that
because the weather can erode them o away or even build them up, it depnds on the weather