Geography, asked by yash81557, 11 months ago

The combined process of erosion, transportation and deposition is known as​

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Answered by Anonymous
5

Answer:

The force of the flowing water moves the mud, sand, pebbles and silt created by erosion. DEPOSITION: Dumping material. The sand, mud, pebbles and silt being transported by the river is eventually dropped. These processes of erosion, transport and deposition are directly linked to how much energy a river has.

Explanation:

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Answered by rekhasingh9670
0

Explanation:

We can see as the river flows past leaves and twigs and other matter. And if we were to step into the river, we'd find sediment - the tiniest of tiny pieces of rock and soil - moving along in the water. Perhaps the river you are thinking about is muddy, which means there is a lot of sediment in the river. The movement of this sediment and material is Transportation .

Where does the material come from? From the riverbed as other sediment wears it down, freeing little pieces, bit by bit, to also flow down the river. And the river also eats into riverbanks, causing little collapses and big avalanches of material to drop into the water. The process of creating the material being transported is called Erosion.

And where does the material go? Sometimes the material settles for a little while only to be picked up again and then set down in a long cycle of transportations, only at some point to be dropped and never moved again. Or perhaps we're talking about mud and silt that flows far out into the ocean and eventually sinks to the bottom. This dropping of material that was created by erosion and moved by transportation is called Deposition.

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