Term
What are the main differences between wind and running water? |
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Definition
less density
less viscosity
no confining channel
commonly more turbulent flow |
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Term
WHat are the three motion of particles? |
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Definition
Bed load
suspended load
saltation-jump |
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Term
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Definition
all three motion of particles together |
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Term
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Definition
the largest particle that's observed moving |
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Term
WHat are the three erosional features? |
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Definition
1. deflation
2. desert placement
3. sand blasting |
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Term
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Definition
lowering of the existing surfaces
- wind blows fine particles |
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Term
What are the five things that happen during desert placement? |
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Definition
1. desert pavement formation begins with the wind blowing fne-grained materials into heterogeneous soil or sediment
2. during rainstorms, the fine, windblown sediments infilrate beneath the coarse layer of pebbles
3. Microbes living beneath the pebbles produce bubbles that help raise the pebbles & maintain their position at the surface
4. Overtime, these processes lead to thickening of the dust accumulating beneath pebble layer
5. a continued supply of wind blown dust makes the deposit thicker |
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Term
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Definition
Wind fractured pebbles to ventifact
- the side the wind is coming from will be polished and the opposite side will be rough |
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Term
Sand dunes are considered to be what kind of features? |
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Definition
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Term
Under what conditions do Sand Dunes form? |
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Definition
-availability of sand
-wide open area
-STRONG wind
-an obstacle (rock or vegetation) |
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Term
What happens during the early stage of sand dunes? |
|
Definition
small sand drifts form in wind shadow |
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|
Term
What happens in the middle stage of sand dunes? |
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Definition
large but seperate form in wind shadow |
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Term
What happens in the final stage of sand dunes? |
|
Definition
drifts coalsce into a dune |
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Term
How does a ripple or a sand dune advance? |
|
Definition
by the movements of individual grains of sands |
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|
Term
What are the five types of sand dunes? |
|
Definition
Barchans
Blowout dunes
Transverse Dune
Longitudinal Dunes
Star Dunes |
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Term
What sand dune is crescent shaped? |
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Definition
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Term
In a barchan dune the direction the horns of the crescent point mean what? |
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Definition
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Term
Barchan dunes are the products of what? |
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Definition
limited sand supply and unidirectional winds |
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Term
Barchan dunes are usful to determine what? |
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Definition
the direction of the wind |
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Term
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Definition
The reverse of barchans- THe slip face of a blow out ddone is convex downwind - shaped like a C if the wind is coming at it like <<<<< but is an opposite C is coming like <<<< |
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Term
What is a trasverse dune? |
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Definition
Long ridge oriented at right angles to the wind direction |
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Term
How to trasverse dunes form and where? |
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Definition
They form in regions where there is abundant sand and vegetation is absent- normally found around beaches |
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Term
What are longitudinal dunes? |
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Definition
long ridges of sand whose orientation is parallel to the wind direction |
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Term
What is needed for longitudinal dunes need to form? |
|
Definition
moderate sand supply, a rough pavement, and winds that are always in the same general direction |
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Term
|
Definition
multiple changes of direction |
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|
Term
Where are star dunes found? |
|
Definition
In Africa in the Sahara Desert |
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|
Term
What are the three types of deserts? |
|
Definition
Hot Deserts
Temperate Zone Deserts
Cold Deserts |
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|
Term
What is an example of a Hot Desert? |
|
Definition
Sahara Desert, Australian desert, Kalahari desert |
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|
Term
What are the characteristics of a Hot Desert? |
|
Definition
Typical Deserts- 0-30degrees Nother & 30-50 degrees south |
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Term
What are examples of Temperate Zone Deserts? |
|
Definition
Great Basin, Gobi,and Mojawe |
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|
Term
What are the reasons for the Temperate Zone deserts? |
|
Definition
Rain shadow
area is far away from water
orographic effect |
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Term
What are the latitude and longitude regions for the Temperate Zone desert? |
|
Definition
30-50 degrees nother and 30-50 degrees south |
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|
Term
What are the latitude and longitude of the cold deserts? |
|
Definition
50-90 degrees north and 80-90 degrees south |
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|
Term
What are the five desert characteristics? |
|
Definition
physical weathering is predominant
thin soil
deflation/desert pavement/ ventifacts/dunes
desert varnish- reddish brown coating
suspended sediments |
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|
Term
What are the two kinds of glaciers? |
|
Definition
valley glaciers and continential glaciers |
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Term
What are valley glaciers? |
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Definition
glaciers that move through valleys |
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Term
What are continental glaciers? |
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Definition
large piece of ice moving over the land (continents)- Greenland is an example |
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Term
What steps does a glacier go through to form and how long does it take to form?
|
|
Definition
snow- 90% air
granular ice- 50% air
Firn- 20-30% air
glacier- 20% air as bubbles
It takes 15-20 years to form |
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|
Term
What happens it ablation is higher than accumulation? |
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Definition
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|
Term
What happens is accumulation and ablation are equal? |
|
Definition
Ice front remains in the same position |
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Term
What happens if acculamation is higher than ablation? |
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Definition
Snow fall, snow turing to ice |
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Term
What happens if ablation is dominant? |
|
Definition
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Term
What is ablation and what are the three ways it can happen? |
|
Definition
loosing of ice
1. direct melting
2. iceburg caluing
3. sublimation- solid goes to gas |
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|
Term
How long does it take for glaciers to form? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
Valley glaciers are also known as what... |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Alpine Mountains are an example of what? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
What are the three mechanisms of glacial flow? |
|
Definition
plastic flow
basal flow
glacial surge |
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|
Term
|
Definition
individual ice crystals move |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
-whole thing moves as a unit
-slight melting at the base
-thin film of water
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|
Term
Where is basal slip common? |
|
Definition
dominates in temperate regions where pressure of overlying ice melts water at glacier base |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
very rapid movement of glacier |
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|
Term
|
Definition
where a glacier moves over steps in bed topography and where is curves around topographic |
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|
Term
How to valley glaciers typically move? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What are all of the glacier features? |
|
Definition
-U shaped valley
-Stration
-Hanging Valley
-Cirque
-Horn
-Tarn
-Fjond
-Arete |
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|
Term
What is the area between two valleys called? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
When do cirque and aretes form? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
How is a U shaped valley created? |
|
Definition
The glacier moving down from its cirque |
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|
Term
How are hanging valleys created? |
|
Definition
WHen ice melts and retreats and tributary valleys are left as hanging valleys |
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|
Term
How are hanging valleys marked? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
the head of a glacial valley with nearly vertical upper walls and a flat or hollowed out base |
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Term
If a cirque is filled with water what is it called? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
series of small lakes forming in the valley |
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|
Term
|
Definition
form because when glaciers melt they dont do it un uniform so the ice chunks melt at different times |
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|
Term
|
Definition
a U shaped valley occupied by an arm of the sea |
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Term
|
Definition
Heterogeneous mix of sediments deposited during direct melting of ice |
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|
Term
|
Definition
sediments deposited by melted water. sorted sediments because it is homogeneous |
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|
Term
What are the depositional valley glacier features? |
|
Definition
Ground Moraine
Lateral Moraine
Media Moraine
End Moraine |
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|
Term
What is the ground moraine? |
|
Definition
if the till is deposited at the end of the valley |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Deposited along the side of the valley |
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|
Term
What is the media morine? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
at the edge of the glacier |
|
|
Term
What are the features of continental glaciers? |
|
Definition
-End Moraine
-Kettle Lake
-Roaches Mountanees
-Drumlin
-Kame
-Varue
-Esker |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
See the till at teach belt |
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|
Term
What are the two types of end moraine for continental glaciers? |
|
Definition
Terminal Moraine
Recessional moraine |
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|
Term
What is terminal moraine? |
|
Definition
terminal moraine is the first moraine belt |
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|
Term
What is recessional moraine? |
|
Definition
linked to the terminal moraine- all of the other moraine belts |
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|
Term
|
Definition
blocks of ice that take a longer time to melt |
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|
Term
What happens during Ice melting? |
|
Definition
A large block of wasting ice is isolated from the main ice mass on an outwash plain surrounded by outwash sediments |
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|
Term
What happens after complete deglaciation? |
|
Definition
a kettle remains after the ice block melts; a lake forms if the kettly lake base is below the water table |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
ice gone and see huge pills of sediment where ice was before |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
hill of till deposits- accumulation of till deposits
parallel to flow |
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|
Term
|
Definition
deposits of outwash, right angles, perpendicular to flow |
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|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Which two features are opposites? |
|
Definition
Drumlin and Roach Mountains |
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|
Term
What are Roach Mountains? |
|
Definition
Bed rock high- due to ice it becomes a gentle slope on the side that the ice came from |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Rythemic deposits of coarse and find sediments
f
c
f
c
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|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What are the two causes of glaciation? |
|
Definition
Plate tectonics and Astronomical |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
distance from the sun- high eccentricity & low eccentricity |
|
|
Term
What is high eccentricity? |
|
Definition
furthest distance frmo the sun- it's an oval |
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|
Term
What is low eccentricity? |
|
Definition
lower distance from the sun- circle |
|
|
Term
How long does astronomical take? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What are the two types of rock? |
|
Definition
Ductile- soft
Brittle- strong |
|
|
Term
What are the three types of forces? |
|
Definition
Tensional <-----> (pull apart)
Compressive ----><----- (push together)
Shearing- sliding past each other |
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|
Term
What two characteristics do folds need in order to be considered a fold? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
What does fault need in order to be considered a fault? |
|
Definition
Brittle and all of the forces (tensional, compressive, shearing) |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
the way the fold is going- where it is striking |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
which way the limb is going |
|
|
Term
A horizontal fold has a... |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
A plunging fold has an axis at a..... |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Which way do anticlines fold? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Which way to synclines fold? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What do assymetrical folds have? |
|
Definition
have one imb that dips more steeply than the other |
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|
Term
What do symmetrical folds have? |
|
Definition
have limbs that dip symmetrically from the axial plane |
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|
Term
What is an overturned fold? |
|
Definition
have limbs that dip in the same direction, but one limb has been tilted beyond verticle |
|
|
Term
What are the three kinds of faults? |
|
Definition
1. Dip slip
2. strike slip
3. oblique slip |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
goes down relative to the footwall |
|
|
Term
What causes normal faulting? |
|
Definition
caused by tensional forces that stretch a rock and tend to pull it apart |
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|
Term
What are the three types of dip slip faulting? |
|
Definition
Normal faulting
reverse faulting
a thrust faulting |
|
|
Term
What causes a reverse fault? |
|
Definition
by compressive forces that squeeze and shorten a rock |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
reverse fault with a shallow-dipping fault plane |
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|
Term
What is strike slip fault? |
|
Definition
Left lateral- deposit the left one
right lateral- deposit the right one |
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|
Term
What is oblique slip faulting? |
|
Definition
caused by a combination of forces in this case left- lateral/ shearing with tension |
|
|
Term
What are the four evidence of faulting? |
|
Definition
1. offset in rock layers
2. lithological change- walking along and seeing rock change
3. sudden change in age
4. sudden change in topography |
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|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What is the wave equation? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What are ocean waves characteristics? |
|
Definition
1.waves travel but water says in the same place
2. When the bottom shallows to about one half the wave length, th wave slows, its wave length decreases
3. as waves approach the shore, they become too steep to support themseles and breaking the surf zone, running up with beach in a swash
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|
|
Term
|
Definition
start at angle and become parallel to the shoreline |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
distance between crust and trough |
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|
Term
If I compare two shore lines- one at an angle and one that is straight up and down which one will erode faster and why? |
|
Definition
stright one because the breakers are forming closer to the shoreline |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
24 hours and fifty minutes |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
gravitational force between the moon and the earth |
|
|
Term
How often is there a tide? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
when all in a line (full moon and new moon) That's when we see highest possible tide the sun adds to it with them all lined up |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
-low
1st &3rd quarter
when solar tide is in oposing force-not adding to the tide |
|
|
Term
What are the six steps of wave refraction? |
|
Definition
1. fast traveling wave approaches deep water
2. part of the wave closest to the beach slows causing the line of waves to refract toward the beach
3. waves bend toward the projecting part of the shore which increases the wave impact on the headland
4. paths of crest diverge, decreasing the wave impact on the beach
5. wave approaches the shore at an angle causing a long shore current
long shore drift results from movement of sand particles by swash and backwash |
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|
Term
How does water and sand travel? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
left behind piece of rock that will be eroded in the future- in middle of waterr |
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|
Term
WHat causes headland to be hit with the highest wave velosity? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
becomes point of maximum erosion |
|
|
Term
What are the erosional features for oceans? |
|
Definition
stacks
sea arch
wave cut terrace
tidal valley |
|
|
Term
WHat are the dispositional features? |
|
Definition
|
|