Wind, water, and ice are common forces that cause erosion and transport sediment from one place to another. These forces can wear away rock and soil through processes like abrasion, and can carry the sediment in the form of sediment loads or suspended particles to new locations.
Wind erosion is the primary cause of erosion and transportation of sediment in a desert environment. Strong winds pick up and carry loose particles, creating features like sand dunes and deflating the landscape.
Most sediment washes or falls into a river as a result of mass movement and runoff. Other sediment erodes from the bottom or sides of the river. Wind can also drop sediment into the water. Hope I helped! -DorkyGeek77
Scientists know that gravity cause sediment to be deposite.
The greatest natural cause of ozone depletion is UV rays. But they also replenish it.
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Earthquakes can trigger (submarine)landslides and debris flows which can act to cause the deposition of sediment, however they are far from the only cause of sediment deposition.
The mountains around the valley formed, creating the valley. The Central Valley formed as the mountains rose, the crust forming the Central Valley's floor was bent downward. Slowly, a thick layer of sediment built up the entire valley floor.
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A decrease in stream velocity due to factors such as a decrease in slope or widening of the stream channel can cause sediment to be deposited. When the stream's capacity to transport sediment is exceeded, it drops the sediment it was carrying. Additionally, changes in the stream's flow rate or turbulence levels can also result in sediment deposition.
Erosion
Sediment can be moved by various agents such as wind, water, ice, and gravity. Wind can transport sediment particles in the air, water can carry sediment along in rivers and oceans, ice can transport sediment in glaciers, and gravity can cause sediment to move downslope in the form of landslides or rockfalls.
three things that both cause erosion and deposition
River valleys form primarily through the process of erosion, where flowing water wears away rock and soil over time. As a river flows, it cuts down into the landscape, creating a V-shaped valley. Additionally, sediment deposition during periods of flooding can contribute to the valley's shape and structure. Over time, these processes can lead to the development of a more expansive and intricate river valley system.
Pressure from sediment turned decaying plankton at the bottom of the ocean into natural gas.
The processes that cause sediment to be lithified into solid sedimentary rock are compaction and cementation. Compaction occurs when the weight of overlying sediment squeezes the grains together, reducing pore space. Cementation happens when minerals in pore spaces precipitate and bind the sediment grains together.