Geography, asked by avnsjsb, 1 year ago

how are landforms formed by the action of river

Answers

Answered by rahuljalotra21pe6e3f
3
The river flows down the steep slope and, as a result, its velocity and eroding power are at their maximum.

As the river flows down with high velocity, vertical erosion or downward cutting will be high which results in the formation of V-Shaped Valleys.

i hope it's helpful

mark me brainliest

avnsjsb: thanks
rahuljalotra21pe6e3f: welcome
Answered by noor0
2
✴️hey mate ☺️☺️☺️☺️☺️

your answer
______________

⏹️The meandering pattern formed by a river is formed usually at high flow, when the water has sufficient speed and volume to cause erosion.

⏏️Water trickled down any substance will naturally meander - try pouring a thin trickle of water down a sloping sheet of glass. Once it begins meandering, the river will erode its bed beneath the water and become entrenched, forming river banks.

⏸️River flow is rarely consistent for long periods - it is always changing. The volume of water, size of sediment and the slope of the bed create characteristic frequencies of the waveform, so the river is always trying to become something which is always changing. As the river meanders, the water on the outside of meander bends tends to erode the outside bank, where the water flows fastest, and deposit sediment on the inside bank, where it flows slowest, forming sedimentary point bars. Thus the meanders move gradually downstream.

⏹️In floods, the water flows over the meanders, creating cut-off meanders and eroding the stream into a new pattern, which is then modified again once the stream volume decreases.

It is a complicated topic and I do not intend writing a text book here, many of which are already available. I suggest you consult these if you want more details.

◀️I hope it will help you ✌️✌️✌️✌️✌️✌️✌️

avnsjsb: stupid
noor0: where is mistake in my answer
avnsjsb: your answer is too long
avnsjsb: but thanks
Similar questions