External Geological Processes and Landscapes
Landforms created by
Geological Agents:
- Wind/ Air
- Ice
- Liquid Water
Powered by:
- Energy from the Sun
- Gravity
Processes involved in
Landscape shaping/Landforms
Types of Weathering:
Deposition
Transportation
Erosion
Classes of Weathering
Biological Weathering
e.g. Roots and Lichens
Chemical weathering
e.g. Hydrolysis
Physical Weathering
e.g. freeze-thaw weathering
Types of Landscapes
Coastal Landscapes
(Seas, Oceans)
Tombolos
Spits
Lagoons
Deltas
Beaches
Sea stacks
Arches
Cliffs
Wave-cut Platforms
Ocean water motions
Lonhshore Currents
Tides
Waves
Karst Landscapes
(Groundwater)
Erosional landforms
appearing Springs
disappearing Streams
Sinkholes
Caves
Stalagmites
(grow upward)
Stalactites
(grow downward)
Groundwater fills the pores
and grooves in the rocks
forming aquiters
Fluvial Landscapes
(Rivers)
Lower Course
Delta
Very gentle slope, very slow flow
Deposition is dominant
Middle Course
Oxbow Lakes
Meader
Floodplains and terraces
Fluvial terraces
Wide flat-floored valleys
Erosion and deposition are important
Transportation dominant
Gentler slope, lower velocity
Upper Course
Landforms
Canyons
Rapids
Waterfalls
V-shaped Valleys
Steep slope, fast flows,
erosion dominat
Torrential Landscapes
(Rainfall, surface runoff
and temporary water
Courses)
Depositional Landforms
Alluvial fans
or cones
Erosional Landforms
Fairy Chimney
Gorges
Ravines
Gullies
Soil Loss
Glacial Landscapes
(Ice)
Depositional Landform
Moraines
Erosional Landforms
(abrasion)
Striation
Round lakes (Tarns)
U-shaped valley
Cirques
Horn
Aeolian Landscapes
(Wind/Air)
Depositional landforms
Loess
Dunes
Erosional processes
and landforms
Abrasion
Mushroom-shaped
rocks
Deflation
Rocky deserts or
pavement