Rivers
Weathering & Erosion
Glaciation
Mass Wasting
Rivers Redux
100

This term refers to the volume of water flowing through a river at any given time; it is a key factor in a river's erosive power.

What is discharge

100

This chemical weathering process happens when oxygen dissolved in water turns iron into iron oxide.

What is oxidation

100

This is the measure of how much sunlight a surface reflects; it is a key reason why scientists care about melting ice.

What is albedo?

100

These are masses of coarse rock fragments that accumulate at the base of a cliff where a landslide has come to rest.

What are talus slopes (larger rocks) or scree slopes (smaller)? 

100

This term refers to the entire area of land that is drained by a specific river and all of its tributaries.

What is a Drainage Basin (or Watershed)?

200

Name at least 3 of the 4 ways that rivers transport sediment.

What is solution, suspension, saltation, & traction

200

In Canada's north, this layer of soil remains frozen year-round and prevents water from draining, leading to solifluction.

What is Permafrost?

200

These bowl-shaped depressions are revealed at the source of a glacier once the ice has melted.

Where are cirques?

200

This term refers to the volume of loose, weathered material sitting on top of bedrock that is susceptible to moving downhill.

What is unconsolidated material?

200

This area at the mouth of a river is affected by sea tides, where brackish water forms from saltwater meeting freshwater.

What is an estuary?

300

This term, formulated by John Powell, describes the point at which a river stops cutting downward and begins widening its valley.

What is base level?

300

This type of mechanical weathering involves water entering cracks, freezing, and expanding by 9%.

What is frost shattering?

300

How do scientists describe a system that drives itself (like melting ice lowers albedo, causing more heat absorption and further melting).

What is a positive feedback loop?

300

Water acts as this, filling spaces between particles and reducing friction, which often leads to mudslides.

What is a lubricant

300

This is the characteristic "winding" shape that a river takes on during its mature and old-age stages as it begins to erode sideways.

What is a meander?

400

This geomorphic process occurs when tectonic uplift or a drop in sea level gives an old river new energy to cut deeper into the land.

What is river rejuvenation

400

This mechanical process occurs when granite formed deep underground reaches the surface and expands due to the release of pressure

What is exfoliation?

400

When two valley glaciers join, their inner lateral moraines combine to form this "stripe" of debris in the middle

What is a medial moraine?

400

This term describes the gradational process of "filling in" low spots with sediment to create a uniform slope.

What is aggradation?

400

This term describes a river system that looks like a tangled mess of interconnected channels, often found in areas with high sediment loads and variable flow.

What is a braided river?

500

It is the term for the deposited river sediments that form low-lying areas like deltas.

What is alluvium

500

Tropical soils are often deep and clay-heavy due to this specific chemical process where water ions replace silicate ions.

What is Hydrolysis?

500

What type of terrain/area would most likely rely on the use of groundwater?

Areas with no mountains. 

500

This famous 1903 event in Alberta is a primary example of how tectonic instability can trigger massive mass wasting.

When was the Frank Slide?

500

This famous landmark was created when tectonic uplift rejuvenated the Colorado River, giving it the energy to carve a massive chasm.

Where is the Grand Canyon?