Geology 1403 Exam 4

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121 Terms

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hydrologic cycle

The continuous recycling of water from the oceans, through the atmosphere, to the continents, and back to the oceans

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gradient

The downhill slope of a river measured as vertical drop/horizontal distance

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velocity

The measure of the downstream distance water travels in a given time measured as ft/sec or m/sec
-average velocity increases downstream

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discharge

The volume of water in a stream, measured as the volume of water that passes a particular point in a given period of time

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bed load

sediment particles transported by a river which are too large to be suspended in the water column

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suspended load

The smallest sedimentary particles transported by a stream which are continuously kept suspended above the channel bed

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zone of aeration

The portion of the soil or bedrock where the pore spaces are mostly filled with air

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zone of saturation

The portion of the soil or bedrock where the pore spaces are mostly filled with water

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water table

The surface which separates the zone of aeration from the zone of saturation

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aquifer

A permeable layer of rock or sediment transporting groundwater

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porosity

The percentage of a material's total volume that is pore space

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shoreline

The area between low tide and the highest level on land affected by storm waves

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longshore current

Water between the breaker zone and the beach which flows parallel to the shoreline
-along the beach

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spit

A finger-like projection of a beach into a body of water such as a bay. (parallel to the shoreline)

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tombolo

A projection of the beach from the beach to an offshore island. (perpendicular to the shoreline)
-island offshore

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sea cliff

Steep or vertical slopes formed by erosion in the shoreline area

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glacier

A mass of ice on land consisting of compacted, recrystallized snow that flows under its own weight
-reservoir in the cycle where water is stored for long periods of time

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glacial drift

A general term for all deposits that result from glacial activity

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cirque

A steep-walled, bowl-shaped depression formed by erosion of valley glaciers

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moraine

A mound-like or linear deposit of glacial till

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kettle

Circular to oval depressions left in a glacial outwash plain, often filled with water

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saltation

The bouncing or skipping movement of medium sized sand particles

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desert pavement

The mosaic of packed together pebbles left behind by the removal by wind of all the fine-grained particles

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barchan dune

Crescent shaped dunes which form in areas of limited sand supply. Tips of the dunes point downwind

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parabolic dune

Dunes common in coastal areas which are crescent shaped with their tips pointing upwind

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running water

most important geologic process modifying Earth's land surface

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hydrosphere

consists of all water on earth

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what are the characteristics of water flow

-laminar
-turbulent

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what is laminar

streamlines are parallel to one another with no mixing

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what is turbulent

streamlines are complexly intertwined with mixing
-energetic
-capable of erosion Grand Canyon
-capable of sediment transport Mississippi River

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runoff

-downslope movement of water during a rainstorm

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what are the types of runoff

-sheet flow or continuous sheet of shallow water
-channel flow or confined to long trough-like depressions

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erosional features of streams

-stream terraces
-incised meanders
-water gaps

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Load

-dissolved
-solid
-suspended bed

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What are the characteristics of channel flow

-gradient
-velocity
-discharge

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erosion

removal from a source area of dissolved substances as well as loose particles of soil, minerals and rock
-dissolved substances
-particles

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deposition

most of the geologic work of rivers and streams takes placed during floods

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alluvial

all processes related to rivers and running water

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alluvium

general term for all sediment deposited by rivers

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what are the running water depositional settings

-channels
-floodplains
-deltas
-alluvial fans

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what are the types of channels

-braided rivers
-meandering rivers

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braided rivers

-dividing and rejoining channels
-broad and shallow
-sand and gravel bars
-bed load transport
-arid and glacial environments

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meandering rivers

-single channel
-varies in shape from semicircular to asymmetric
-velocity changes across channel
-may cutoff from main channel

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what are the parts of a channel

-meandering river
-point bar
-cut bank
-ox-bow lakes

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floodplains

low-lying relatively flat areas adjacent to river channels

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what are the 3 types of deltas

-stream dominated Mississippi river, LA
-wave dominated Nile Delta, Egypt
-tide dominated Ganges-Brahmaputra Delta, Bangladesh

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alluvial fans

fan-shaped desposit formed where a fast flowing stream flattens, slows, and spread typically at the exit of a canyon onto a flatter plain

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drainage system

main river channel with all its tributaries

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drainage basin

area drained by a river and its tributaries

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divide

high ground separating one drainage basin from another

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what are the drainage systems

-dendritic or tree branching
-rectangular or right angles
-trellis or parallel main streams
-radial or radiate outward
-deranged or highly irregular

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base level

lowest level to which a stream or river can erode-sea level
-river or stream will adjust to a change in its base level either by eroding deeper or by depositing sediment

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graded stream

a stream at equilibrium

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valleys

-common
-stream valley or v shaped
-created by erosion of running water downhill

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additional erosional landforms

-stream terraces or remnants of old flood plains Snake River, WY
-incised meanders or very steep cliffs cut into rock Colorado River, UT
-water gap or narrow canyone thru rock layers Cumberland Gap

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permeability

the capacity to transmit fluids
-rocks may be porous without being permeable

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groundwater

water beneath the surface filling open spaces in rocks, sediment and soil

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aquiclude

any rock layer with porosity and/or permeability so low that it prevents the movement of groundwater
-precludes

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recharge

additions to the zone of saturation
-Florida

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what are the groundwater withdrawals

-streams or lakes
-springs
-wells

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cone of depression

an area around the well created from pumping water from a well and lowering the water table

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artesian system

any system in which the ground water is confined, building up pressure

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what is the primary agent of erosion

groundwater

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groundwater erosion and transport

-chemical weathering
-ions in solution

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surface water erosion and transport

-physical and some chemical weathering
-ions in solution plus solid sediment

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what are the features of groundwater erosion

-sinkholes
-karst topography
-caves and caverns

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what is the difference between caves and caverns

size
-caves are large enough for a person to enter
-caverns very large caves or cave systems

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dripstone

general term for all cave deposits

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what are the human impact on groundwater

-over use by lowering the water table
-saltwater incursion
-subsidence
-contamination

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examples of geysers

-old faithful
-ca
-iceland

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characteristics of shorelines

-narrow and long
-marine processes
-erosion, transport and deposition

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3 shoreline processes

-tides
-waves
-currents

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tides

move the area of wave attack onshore and offshore twice a day

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waves

ultimately responsible for most erosion, transport and deposition in shoreline areas

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currents

created by wave motion near shore

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waves

created by wind blowing over water from storms

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2 types of currents

-longshore
-rip

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rip current

narrow surface currents that flow out to sea through the breaker zone
-perpendicular to the shore
-mechanism for mass transport of water out of the breaker zone and back into the deeper water
-extremely strong currents

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5 shoreline depositional landforms

-beaches
-spits
-baymouth bars
-tombolos
-barrier islands

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beach

deposit of unconsolidated sediment extending from the low tide mark shoreward to a change in topography such as dunes, sea cliffs, or vegetation
-wave energy
-sedimentary materials available

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summer beaches

-calm wave intensity
-sandy
-wide berm
-gentle sloping beach face
-smooth offshore profile

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winter beaches

-stormy wave intensity
-coarser grained sediment
-small or no berm
-steep beach face
-sand bars parallel to shore

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beach sediment

-rivers and streams
-redistributed by longshore currents
-zig zag pattern of sandgrains

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baymouth bar

a spit completely closes off the bay

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barrier island

long narrow island of sand a short distance offshore, parallel to the coast and separated from the mainland by a lagoon

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parts of a barrier island

-beach
-back barrier
-marshy area
-lagoon
-mainland

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where do barrier islands form

-gently sloping passive continental margins
-abundant sand
-wave energy and tidal range is low
-east and gulf coasts of the U.S.

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how is sediment lost to the shore

-offshore transport by wave action
-wind
-submarine canyons

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erosional landforms of beaches

-sea cliff
-wave-cut platform
-wave-built platform
-marine terraces

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erosion of sea cliffs

-headlands
-sea caves
-sea arch
-sea stacks

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what do erosional shoreline processes do

tend to straighten an irregular coastline over time

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depostional coasts

-abundant detrital sediment
-wide sandy beaches
-deltas
-barrier island
ex. east and gulf coasts of U.S.

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erosional coasts

-steep and irregular
-lack beaches
-no deltas or barrier islands
-erosional landforms
ex. west coast of U.S.

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submergent coast

sea level has risen with respect to land
ex. Chesapeake Bay

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emergent coast

land has risen with respect to the sea
ex. S. CA

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sea level

is rising worldwide

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problems with rising sea level

-flooding
-landward migration of barrier islands
-increased coastal flooding during storms
-saltwater incursion threatens groundwater

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ways to prevent or minimize shoreline erosion

-sea walls
-riprap
-sand berms
-beach nourishment

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till

sediment deposited directly by ice

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glacial ice

sublimates or goes directly from a solid to a gas