There's this boy in my class named Jarris Henderson Brown and i really like him but i don't know if he likes me. So i asked santa to make it possible that me and him can go out but for some reason deep down in my heart i know it won't happen.
Creep - TLC song - was created on 1994-10-31.
answear
That creep?!
A creep meter is a wire stretched across a fault to measure the horizontal movement from the ground.
A Creep Meter uses a wire stretched across a fault to measure horizontal movement of the ground.
No. Slump is "faster" but still at a very slow rate
Creep is the irreversible deformation of a material over time under constant load, while slump is the vertical downward movement of material due to gravity. Runoff is the flow of water over the land surface and is unrelated to the deformation of materials like creep and slump.
mudflows slump creep landslides
mudflows slump creep landslides
mass movement
It would typically be classified as a slump if the rock falls suddenly in a mass movement due to the force of gravity and weak underlying materials. Creep, on the other hand, involves a slow and gradual movement of soil or rock downslope over time.
A slump mass movement is typically faster than a creep mass movement. Slump movement involves a more sudden and rapid downslope movement of material, often in a rotational manner, whereas creep movement involves a slower, more gradual flow of material over time.
It falls over due to creep of the soil around it.
The geomorphic landform that identifies a slump is called a scarp or slump scar. This feature is created when a mass of rock or soil moves downhill along a curved sliding surface, resulting in a distinct steep slope at the head of the slump.
1- slump 2- creep 3- mud flows 4- rock slides
that, her, creep, slump, mass...almost all the words on you're computer screen
The various types of mass movement of ground (creep, slump, landslide, mudslide) are all created by the same exerted force, which is gravity. Even liquid erosion and subsidence are caused by gravity, if indirectly, because water is flowing downhill, to a lower level. Gravity is also what squeezes water up or sideways into rock strata, except for the very rare exception, which is geothermal steam.