explain waves,currents,tusnami,ground water and glacier
Answers
Waves are the moving upper surfaces of water due to difference in tides and winds movie over the top surface.
Moving icebergs or chunks of ice are known as glaciers.
Tsunamis are harbour waves or waves whose wavelength is greater than the land area near it. They can be caused by an underground earthquake, volcanic eruption, landslide, etc.
Ground water is the water that seeps into the soil during precipitation and leads to streams when it saturates the groundwater aquifers.
Ocean currents are the waves caused by the difference in tides.
wave is a disturbance of a field in which a physical attribute oscillates repeatedly at each point or propagates from each point to neighboring points, or seems to move through space.
Current is a flow of electrical charge carriers, usually electrons or electron-deficient atoms. ... Physicists consider current to flow from relatively positive points to relatively negative points.
A tsunami is a series of fast moving waves in the ocean caused by powerful earthquakes or volcanic eruptions. A tsunami has a very long wavelength.
Groundwater is the water found underground in the cracks and spaces in soil, sand and rock.
- A large mass of ice formed over many years that does not melt during the summer. Glaciers move slowly over an area of land such as a mountain valley.