yes
Waves
erosion
The shape of land determined by relief, elevation, and landforms is known as the topography of the area. Topography refers to the arrangement of the natural and artificial physical features of an area, including hills, valleys, rivers, and other landforms.
Slow processes like weathering and erosion can form landforms such as valleys, plains, hills, and plateaus. These processes gradually shape the Earth's surface over long periods of time by wearing down, moving, and depositing rocks and soil. The resulting landforms can vary in size and shape depending on the specific geological conditions and the intensity of the processes involved.
how have the earth's physical processes shape of the earth's landforms, climate, and plants life
The tectonic plates below earths surface shape earths landforms
Very Very slowly
Waves
Pangaea
No, certainly not. Geological processes are slowly changing everything.
The wind that slowly causes changes in Earth's landforms is known as "wind erosion." Over time, wind carrying sand and dust particles can wear down rocks and shape the surface of the land through processes such as abrasion and deflation. This can lead to the formation of features like sand dunes and desert pavement.
The landforms around it??
geomorphology
new landforms.
Yes, it can.
Landforms are commonly classified based on their shape, origin, and location. Shape-based classifications categorize landforms as mountains, valleys, plains, plateaus, and more. Origin-based classifications group landforms as volcanic, erosional, depositional, or tectonic in nature. Locational classifications are based on geographic features such as coastal, fluvial, glacial, or desert landforms.
erosion