Yes, a body of water is a geological feature.
A kame is a geological feature which means an unusual shaped mound or hill. It consists of sand, till or gravel. It is created in a depression on a retreating glacier and is then left on the land surface.
True. Numerical age is the age of a rock or geological feature in years, typically determined through radiometric dating methods.
usually a rift or trench
The East African Rift Valley is the major geological feature that bisects Kenya. It is a tectonic plate boundary where the African Plate is splitting into two, causing the valley to form.
To determine that a fault is the youngest feature in a rock body, geologists use the principle of cross-cutting relationships, which states that a geological feature that cuts through another is younger than the feature it disrupts. If the fault displaces layers of rock, it indicates that the faulting occurred after those layers were formed. Additionally, examining the sedimentary layers for any evidence of erosion or deposition can further confirm the fault's relative youth compared to the surrounding rock formations.
A palaeocurrent is a geological feature which indicates the direction of flow of water in the geological past.
It would be more of a hydrological feature, hydrology being a subset of geology.
Because they make a huge difference in climate, transport and peoples lives.
An albedo feature is a region on any body in the Solar System with distinct brightness when seen using a telescope, not necessarily corresponding with any real geological formation.
Yes, of course; lithologically, structurally and as an erosion feature.
The unique geological feature found on a beach with rocks that have holes is known as a sea stack.
A small body of water could be a puddle left after it has stopped raining, or a pool of water that is a garden feature, and so on.
A fjord is a geological feature.
Fault
it's big & tropical .
This is a wooded area near Ogano Town in Japan - there is no obvious geological feature directly related to that point.
The most likely geological feature that influenced the drawing of the proclamation of 1763 would be the Appalachian Mountains.