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River landforms - OCRMeanders and oxbow lakes

Erosional landforms include V-shaped valleys, interlocking spurs, waterfalls and gorges. Meanders and oxbow lakes use erosional and depositional processes in their creation.

Part of GeographyDistinctive landscapes

Erosional and depositional landforms - meanders and oxbow lakes

Meanders

As the river makes its way to the , it gains more water and therefore more energy. starts to widen the river. When the river flows over flatter land it can develop large bends called .

  • As a river goes around a bend, most of the water is pushed towards the outside. This causes increased speed and therefore increased erosion (through and ).
  • A steep bank called a river cliff is created on the outside of the meander.
  • The lateral erosion on the outside bend causes undercutting of the leaving an overhanging bank.
  • Water on the inner bend is slower, causing the water to deposit eroded material, creating a gentle slope of sand and shingle.
  • The build-up of deposited sediment is known as a (or sometimes river beach).
The fast current on the outside bank causes lateral erosion, creating a river cliff. The slow current on the inside bank causes deposition, creaitng a slip-off slope.

Oxbow lakes

Due to erosion on the outside of a bend and deposition on the inside, the shape of a meander will change over a period of time. Erosion narrows the neck of the land within the meander and as the process continues, the meander necks move closer together. When there is a very high (usually during a flood), the river cuts across the neck, taking a new, straighter and shorter route. Deposition will occur to cut off the original meander, leaving a horseshoe-shaped oxbow lake.

Erosion makes the neck narrow. During floods, the river takes the shortest course through the neck. The river has a new straighter course and the abandoned meander is called an oxbow lake.