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Stream and River Deposits. Pg. 11 - 13. Deposition . The process by which material is dropped or settles. Rivers do this with particles they pick up like soil and rock. Deposition also forms and renews some of the world’s most productive soils. Deposition in Water.
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Stream and River Deposits Pg. 11 - 13
Deposition • The process by which material is dropped or settles. • Rivers do this with particles they pick up like soil and rock. • Deposition also forms and renews some of the world’s most productive soils.
Deposition in Water • Rock and soil deposited by streams is called alluvium. • Alluvium is dropped at places in a river where the speed of the current decreases. • Erosion occurs on the outside bank where the water flows faster. • Then deposition occurs along the inside bank where the water flows slower.
River Deposits • Heavy minerals (like gold) are sometimes deposited where the river slows down. • This alluvium is called placer deposits.
Designing a Delta • Rivers slow down when they enter a larger body of water, like a lake or ocean. • Here it forms a fan-shaped deposit called a delta. • When a delta forms it extends the coastline. • This occurs where the Mississippi enters the Gulf of Mexico.
Deposition on Land • Sometimes a fast-moving mountain stream flows onto a flat plain, the stream slows down. • Alluvium deposits on the flat plain to form alluvial fans. • Alluvial fans only occur on dry land.
Sometimes periods of high rainfall will suddenly increase the volume of water in a stream and cause it to overflow. • The land it spills on to is the flood plain. • Each flood adds another layer of alluvium.
Fatal Flooding • Flood plains are good for farming because periodic flooding brings new alluvium rich in minerals. • However, flooding can also damage farmland and homes.