A kettle.
A small lake in a cirque is called a tarn. This type of lake forms in a glacial cirque, which is a bowl-shaped depression carved out by a glacier. Tarns are often found at the base of a cirque or in the floor of the depression.
A small depression formed by a chunk of ice and filled with water is called a "pothole." These are common in areas where glaciers have been present and are typically formed by melting ice leaving behind depressions that become filled with water. Potholes can vary in size and shape.
kettle
When drawing a depression contour, the contour lines will have small hatches or ticks on the inner side, indicating a depression in the land. When reading a depression contour on a map, the contour lines inside the depression will have lower elevation values as you move towards the center of the depression.
It is true that lava cools quickly and forms minerals with small crystals.
a kettle
A small lake in a cirque is called a tarn. This type of lake forms in a glacial cirque, which is a bowl-shaped depression carved out by a glacier. Tarns are often found at the base of a cirque or in the floor of the depression.
The bowl-shaped depression at the head of a glacial valley is known as a cirque. It is formed by the erosive action of glaciers as they move and carve out the landscape, typically resulting in steep cliffs around the perimeter. Cirques often serve as the starting point for glaciers, and they may contain a small lake or tarn at the bottom after glacial retreat.
A cirque is a bowl-shaped depression formed by glacial erosion, typically found in mountainous regions. It often features steep sides and a flat floor, which can collect snow and ice. A tarn is a small mountain lake that forms in the basin of a cirque when the melted water accumulates. Thus, a cirque without a tarn would be a glacial depression that lacks this body of water, potentially dry or filled with sediment instead.
A small depression formed by a chunk of ice and filled with water is called a "pothole." These are common in areas where glaciers have been present and are typically formed by melting ice leaving behind depressions that become filled with water. Potholes can vary in size and shape.
A tarn is a small, steep-banked mountain lake, formed when a glacier advancing down a slope scoops material out of the ground in a "cirque" at the base of the slope. (Essentially, it continues downward into the ground before moving horizontally again.) When the glacier melts, the depression can fill with water, and is refilled by melting snow unless it becomes filled by silt.
Chunk is to cut into larger pieces or chunks, rather than fine or small pieces.
A depression in the ground.
glacial plucking moves both small and big stones
A meteoroid.
A bowl-shaped depression that forms around the vent of a volcano is a crater. These craters can be formed by the explosion of volcanic material or the collapse of the volcanic cone following an eruption.
a fat chunk of small foot