In "Rills," the elements that God intended to be free but which man restricts are referred to as "the gifts of nature." This reflects the idea that Natural Resources and the beauty of the environment should be freely accessible to all, yet human greed and societal structures often limit their availability. The phrase highlights the tension between divine intention and human action, emphasizing the need for greater stewardship and appreciation of nature's bounty.
Artificial rills can be constructed as aesthetic water features.
rills
Rills
Over time, rills expand and join together causing gullies.
Rills and gullies are both landforms formed by erosion caused by flowing water. The main difference is in their size and scale: rills are smaller and shallower, while gullies are larger and deeper. Gullies tend to be more pronounced and have steeper sides compared to rills.
Rills are formed by erosion. As soil erodes a thin channel is left, this channel fills with water. Gullies are formed by running water. An area where many rills have formed can turn into a gully.
They are called rills. Rills are small channels that form on sloping land when water flows over the surface, cutting small ditches as it moves downhill.
floodplain
Rills
Rills are a product of soil erosion by water, and can be defined as small incised channels in the soil that result from the actions of flowing water over an unvegetated or partially vegetated soil surface. They can be obliterated by tillage (ploughing over the rills). Where they are too large to be removed by tillage, they are referred to as gullies.
rills
A network of rills, gullies, streams, and rivers in an area.