The Earth's lithosphere consists of various large and small plates known as lithospheric or tectonic plates. These plates are positioned atop the molten mantle or asthenosphere and are in continuous motion driven primarily by the heat from the Earth's interior.
The lithospheric plates' movements bring about alterations on the Earth's surface. When plates move apart or diverge, rifts are created, leading to the formation of continents and ocean basins through processes like sea floor spreading.
When lithospheric plates collide, various landforms are produced, such as mountains, trenches, and areas with heightened volcanic or seismic activity.
When the Earth's plates move, stress can cause cracks and fractures on the Earth's surface, a phenomenon known as faulting.
Normal faulting happens when rocks move horizontally in opposite directions, creating tension that leads to one block of rock moving down compared to the other side.
Reverse faulting occurs when rocks move horizontally in a compressional manner, pushing one block of rock strata up along the fault line while the other block hangs below.
Tear faults are formed when the rock structure is displaced laterally in opposite directions. An example is the San Andreas Fault in California.
Faulting often leads to the creation of block mountains and rift valleys. The land between two parallel faults either rises or remains at the same level while surrounding areas sink.
An example of physical weathering is freeze-thaw action, where water seeps into the cracks of rocks, freezes, expands, and eventually causes the rock to break apart.
Wind erosion in deserts can lead to the formation of unique landforms like sand dunes through the constant movement of sand particles.
When a river floods, it carries sediment downstream. As the flow slows, the sediment is deposited along the riverbanks, contributing to the formation of river deltas.
As a river flows from mountains to the sea, it shapes the land through erosion, transportation, and deposition, forming various landforms based on water volume, land slope, and carried materials.
This HTML structure provides a detailed and organized summary of riverine landforms, including their formation processes and key characteristics across the river's journey from its source to the mouth.
As glaciers move, they carry rocks and gravel, simultaneously eroding the bed and sides of the valley. This process creates V-shaped valleys with flat bases and steep sides.
In mountains, glaciers carve deep hollows, creating bowl-shaped depressions known as corries (Scotland), cirques (France), or cwms (Wales). These features are prevalent in the Scottish and Welsh highlands.
After ice melts in a corrie, it forms a lake called a corrie lake or tarn.
Glaciers act as immense plows, eroding the land underneath. They transport sand, gravel, clay, and boulders, depositing these materials as moraines when the ice melts.
Sometimes, glaciers reach the sea without melting, breaking up to form floating masses of ice known as icebergs.
32 videos|186 docs|40 tests
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1. How are old fold mountains formed? |
2. What are the main differences between endogenic and exogenic forces in shaping landforms? |
3. How do rivers create different landforms on Earth's surface? |
4. What role do glaciers play in shaping the Earth's surface? |
5. How do earthquakes and volcanoes contribute to the formation of landforms? |
32 videos|186 docs|40 tests
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