Weathering and Mass Wasting
Hydrology and Drainage
Fluvial Landforms
Coastal Processes
Surprise!
100

This term refers to the mechanical processes that break down rock at Earth's surface without chemical alteration.

What is Physical Weathering?

100

This boundary line separates different drainage basins or watersheds.

What is a Drainage Divide?

100

This general term refers to any rock or sediment deposited by running water.

What is Alluvium?

100

This term describes seawater with a salinity level significantly higher than the average 3.5%

What is Brine?

100

These are the Processes at work in the Exogenic System.

What are Gradational Processes?

200

This specific type of physical weathering occurs when water enters cracks in rock, freezes, and expands

What is Frost Action (or Frost Wedging)?

200

This is the most common drainage pattern, resembling the branching of a tree.

What is Dendritic Pattern?

200

Located on the outside bend of a meandering curve, this feature is created by active erosion.

What is a Cut-Bank?

200

This coastal feature is a narrow ridge of sand that projects into a bay or the open sea from the land.

What is a Spit?

200

This is a man-made wall built perpendicular to the shore to trap sand and prevent beach erosion.

What is a Groin?

300

This type of mass wasting involves the extremely slow, downslope movement of soil.

What is Soil Creep?

300

This specific drainage pattern occurs when streams flow off a central peak, such as a volcano.

What is Radial Pattern?

300

This crescent-shaped body of water is formed when a meander is cut off from the main river channel.

What is an Oxbow Lake?

300

This erosional feature is a portion of rock isolated from the mainland, formed after a sea arch collapses.

What is a Sea Stack?

300

This is a pair of structures built to protect the entrance of a harbor or river mouth from sediment buildup.

What are Jetties?

400

This phenomenon occurs when slabs of rock peel off in layers after the removal of overlying pressure, often creating dome-shaped features.

What is Exfoliation (or Pressure-Release Jointing)?

400

This formation occurs when two or more alluvial fans overlap.

What is a Bajada?

400

This depositional feature forms at the mouth of a river, where it enters the sea.

What is a Delta?

400

This process involves the bending of wave crests as they approach the shore, focusing energy on headlands.

What is Wave Refraction?

400

This describes a rock layer or sediment deposit that is impermeable to water, often trapping an aquifer below it.

What is an Aquiclude?

500

This type of weathering occurs through the help of hydrolysis, where water acts on the corners of rocks to produce new minerals.

What is Spheroidal Weathering?

500

Both the Nile River and the Colorado River are examples of this type of stream that flows through desert states.

What is an Exotic Stream?

500

These are meanders that have been rejuvenated, or "down-cut" into deep rock as a result of tectonic uplift or a drop in base level.

What is an Entrenched Meander?

500

This depositional feature is a ridge of sand or gravel that connects an island to the mainland.

What is a Tombolo?

500

This specific vegetation type is found growing along the banks of a river or stream.

What is Riparian Vegetation?