Delta.
A landform created when a river reaches a large body of water and deposits sediments is called a delta. Deltas are typically triangular or fan-shaped and form where the river's velocity decreases, causing it to deposit the sediments it has been carrying.
An inlet is a landform. It is a small part of a body of water that reaches into the coast.
A glacier deposits its load when the ice melts, releasing the sediments and rocks it carried. This can happen when the glacier reaches lower elevations or warmer temperatures, causing the ice to melt and the sediments to be left behind.
Deposition occurs when sediment carried by a river, which is no longer moving fast enough to transport it, is dropped. When a river reaches a body of water, like an ocean or a sea, its velocity slows down and deposits the sediment it was carrying. Over time, these deposited sediments build up and create a fan-shaped landform known as a delta.
It is called a delta
A glacier deposits the sediment it is carrying away when it reaches the end of its flow path, where the melting ice releases the sediments it was transporting. This process forms various landforms such as moraines, outwash plains, and glacial till.
The soil deposits at the Nile Delta were caused by the sediment carried by the Nile River over thousands of years. The river's flow slows down as it reaches the Mediterranean Sea, leading to the deposition of the sediments carried from upstream areas. This process helped create the fertile land that supports agriculture in the region.
The Outer Reaches was created in 1951.
The Northern Reaches was created in 1988.
From the Icy Reaches was created on 2011-11-16.
The Inner Reaches of Outer Space was created in 1986.
As a river flows it picks up sediment and carries it away. When the river reaches the ocean the sediments deposited, over time a delta forms.