The land is considered eroded.
Land IS washed away in heavy rain and wind through the processes of weathering and erosion. The reason ALL of it is not washed away at once is because it takes considerable time for enough material to be weathered for it to be carried away by the rain and wind.
If a column of land is left behind by being eroded by waves, it is called a sea stack. Sea stacks are formed when softer rock is eroded away, leaving a harder rock structure standing in the sea.
Those are typically called landslides or mudslides, which occur when large amounts of soil, rock, and debris are moved downhill by the force of water.
Moving away from land is called an ebb tide.
when the topsoil is washed away, the land is barren.
the land is washed away and than rebuilt
Land IS washed away in heavy rain and wind through the processes of weathering and erosion. The reason ALL of it is not washed away at once is because it takes considerable time for enough material to be weathered for it to be carried away by the rain and wind.
because it decreases the fertility of the soil as the topsoil gets blown or washed away.
If a column of land is left behind by being eroded by waves, it is called a sea stack. Sea stacks are formed when softer rock is eroded away, leaving a harder rock structure standing in the sea.
Those are typically called landslides or mudslides, which occur when large amounts of soil, rock, and debris are moved downhill by the force of water.
Moving away from land is called an ebb tide.
Flood is land that has been washed away by rising and overflowing bodies of water. Floods usually happen when there is heavy rain fall.
when the topsoil is washed away, the land is barren.
because it is easier for soil to be washed away on a hillside than on low land I THINK
from a land far far away that gets bombed every day called taliban land
He's from the far away land called Texas.
Egyptians were the first to use geometry. After the Nile river flooded and washed away many of the boundaries between tracts of land, they used geometry and the remaining reference points (like hilltops or big rocks that were not moved by the flood) to re-establish the tracts of land.