the driving force for erosion is , when bad things come out of driving that involves erosion.
The five agents of erosion in nature are water, wind, ice, gravity, and living organisms. The driving force behind all of these agents of erosion is the movement of Earth's materials caused by energy from the sun, gravity, and Earth's internal heat.
Gravity is the driving force behind all agents of erosion. If there is no gravity, rain will not fall and running water will not happen. Similarly, wind, glacial activity and waves are driven by gravity.
Agents of erosion caused in part by the force of gravity include mass wasting processes such as landslides, rockfalls, and slumps. Gravity acts as a driving force for these processes by pulling loose material downhill.
Water flow
The driving force behind weathering is the breakdown of rocks into smaller particles due to processes like temperature changes, water, wind, and biological activity. Deposition is often caused by the erosion of rocks and sediments being transported by water, wind, or ice and then being deposited in a new location when these agents lose energy.
The five agents of erosion in nature are water, wind, ice, gravity, and living organisms. The driving force behind all of these agents of erosion is the movement of Earth's materials caused by energy from the sun, gravity, and Earth's internal heat.
Gravity is the driving force behind all agents of erosion. If there is no gravity, rain will not fall and running water will not happen. Similarly, wind, glacial activity and waves are driven by gravity.
Agents of erosion caused in part by the force of gravity include mass wasting processes such as landslides, rockfalls, and slumps. Gravity acts as a driving force for these processes by pulling loose material downhill.
Yes. Erosion is weathering. It's can apply force but doesn't have to.
The most important and strongest force of erosion is Water.
Water flow
The driving force behind weathering is the breakdown of rocks into smaller particles due to processes like temperature changes, water, wind, and biological activity. Deposition is often caused by the erosion of rocks and sediments being transported by water, wind, or ice and then being deposited in a new location when these agents lose energy.
Erosion
Friction causes erosion through wind or water.
wind is an agent of erosion which causes sheet erosion
Temperature Change is the driving force behind Weathering by Exfoliation. Continuous alternation of wetting and drying of rock masses results to an uneven expansion and contraction of their surface, as a result of this, an heaving and sagging mechanism is put in place and this eventually results to sheeting of the rock surface, which latter falls off.
erosion