water on beaches..and wind erosion in deserts
Sand dunes are a type of landform that forms on beaches due to wind erosion. They are created when wind transports and deposits sand particles, shaping them into mounds or hills along the shoreline. Sand dunes play an important role in protecting coastlines from erosion and providing habitats for unique plant and animal species.
Sheet erosion
The weakest kind of erosion is probably sheet erosion, which is a gradual removal of thin layers of soil over a large area due to rainfall and surface runoff.
Landforms such as deltas, alluvial fans, and beaches are formed by deposition. In these cases, sediments are deposited by rivers, wind, or waves, resulting in the accumulation of material and the creation of new landforms.
A common kind of mechanical weathering is called erosion. It refers to the loosening up of rock particles as well as the movement of these particles to another location.
Pennsylvania has no deserts.
Greece has no deserts.
There are no true deserts in Japan.
There are hot deserts, such as the Sahara, Mojave and Kalahari and there are cold deserts such as Antarctica, the Gobi and the Patagonian Deserts.
There are no true deserts in Britain.
That would depend upon the season of the year and the particular desert. In some deserts, dust storms are quite common. In other deserts thunderstorms are common during the rainy season. The Antarctic, the largest desert in the world, has snow storms including blizzards.
There are two main groups of deserts - hot and cold.
Mexico has two major deserts - the Chihuahuan and the Sonoran. Both are subtropical hot deserts.
Soil erosion
water erosion
Water erosion
Mountains are one of the main landforms found in Greece. Beaches, valleys, rivers and volcanoes are also common throughout Greece.