what do we call the raised bank of a river formed by alluvial deposition
Answers
Answered by
1
Answer:
The raised bank of a river formed by alluvial deposition is called as flood plains.
Explanation:
Floodplains are enormous; level scopes of land that forms on either side of a stream. The floodplain is the region that a river floods onto when it's encountering high release.
At the point when a stream floods, its proficiency diminishes quickly as a result of an expansion in erosion, lessening the river’s speed and constraining it to store its heap. The heap is saved over the floodplain as alluvium.
Answered by
1
A floodplains and deltas are known as raised banks of a river that is formed by the alluvial deposit.
Explanation:
- The flood plains are those plains that are made up by the deposition of the alluvial soil along the alluvial deposition consist of alluvium in loose clay sand and silt.
- It is geologically young and not consolidated into solid rocks. The floodplains alluvium is highly fertile and has supported earlier civilizations.
Learn more about the what do we call the raised bank of a river formed by alluvial deposition.
- brainly.in/question/9883372 answered by mindfulmaisel.
Similar questions