Erosion, weathering and mass movement
Erosion is the process that wears away the river bed and banks. Erosion also breaks up the rocks that are carried by the river.
There are four types of erosion:
- Hydraulic action - This is the sheer power of the water as it smashes against the river banks. Air becomes trapped in the cracks in the rock of the river bank and bed, and causes the rock to break apart.
- Abrasion - When pebbles grind along the river bank and bed in a sand-papering effect.
- Attrition - When rocks that the river is carrying knock against each other. They break apart to become smaller and more rounded.
- Solution - When the water dissolves certain types of rocks, eg limestone.
Weathering and mass movement
As the river flows, it erodes the land creating a valleyA low area of land between hills or mountains, typically with a river flowing through it with steep sides called a v-shaped valley. If the river meets more resistant rock it will flow around the rock. This produces interlocking spurHill that a river meanders around in a V-shaped valley. When viewed from downstream, these spurs appear to be locked together.. The river erodes the valley bottom, but the valley sides are broken down by weatheringThe breaking down of rocks in situ by the action of weather, plants, animals and chemical processes. .
There are three types of weathering:
- Mechanical 鈥 physical changes causes rocks to break down, for example, a change in temperature from day to night causes rock to expand and contract and break up (eg onion skin weathering). Or, changes in temperature cause water to freeze and expand, melt and contract leading to freeze-thaw weatheringWhen water in rocks freezes and expands, breaking the rock apart..
- Chemical 鈥 rainwater is slightly acidic and over time this wears away the rock.
- Biological - occurs when plants and animals wear away rocks, for example, roots growing in cracks in the rock or animals such as rabbits burrowing into rock.
The broken rock fragments (as a result of weathering) move down the slope through mass movementA large-scale downward movement of rocks and material. . These can be rapid, such as landslideWhen the rocks on the side of a steep slope give way. or slow as with soil creep:
- Landslides are occasional, rapid movements of a mass of earth or rock sliding along a steep slope. They can occur after periods of heavy rain, when the water saturates overlying rock, making it heavy and liable to slide.
- Soil creep is a very slow movement, occurring on very gentle slopes because of the way soil particles repeatedly expand and contract in wet and dry periods. When wet, soil particles increase in size and weight, and expand at right angles. When the soil dries out, it contracts vertically. As a result, the soil slowly moves down slope.
More guides on this topic
- Coastal processes - Edexcel
- Coastal landforms - erosional and depositional processes - Edexcel
- Human activities on coastal management - Edexcel
- River landforms - Edexcel
- Human management of rivers - Edexcel
- UK landscapes - Edexcel
- How do glacial processes form the land? - Edexcel
- Human activities and glaciation - Edexcel