When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Riverscape - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riverscape

    A riverscape [1] (also called river landscape) [2] comprises the features of the landscape which can be found on and along a river. Most features of riverscapes include natural landforms (such as meanders and oxbow lakes) but they can also include artificial landforms (such as man-made levees and river groynes). Riverscapes can be divided into ...

  3. River - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/River

    While rivers may flow into lakes or man-made features such as reservoirs, the water they contain will always tend to flow down toward the ocean. [3] However, if human activity siphons too much water away from a river for other uses, the riverbed may run dry before reaching the sea. [3] The outlets mouth of a river can take several forms.

  4. List of fluvial landforms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fluvial_landforms

    Landforms related to rivers and other watercourses include: Channel (geography) – Narrow body of water; Confluence – Meeting of two or more bodies of flowing water; Cut bank – Outside bank of a water channel, which is continually undergoing erosion; Crevasse splay – Sediment deposited on a floodplain by a stream which breaks its levees

  5. Glossary of landforms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_landforms

    Beach cusps – Shoreline formations made up of various grades of sediment in an arc pattern; Beach ridge – Wave-swept or wave-deposited ridge running parallel to a shoreline; Bight – Shallowly concave bend or curve in a coastline, river, or other geographical feature

  6. River ecosystem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/River_ecosystem

    The profile of the river water column is made up of three primary actions: erosion, transport, and deposition. Rivers have been described as "the gutters down which run the ruins of continents". [9] Rivers are continuously eroding, transporting, and depositing substrate, sediment, and organic material.

  7. Drainage system (geomorphology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drainage_system...

    Dendritic drainage: the Yarlung Tsangpo River, Tibet, seen from space: snow cover has melted in the valley system. In geomorphology, drainage systems, also known as river systems, are the patterns formed by the streams, rivers, and lakes in a particular drainage basin. They are governed by the topography of land, whether a particular region is ...

  8. Body of water - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Body_of_water

    several different meanings related to wetland or aquatic features. Source: the original point from which the river or stream flows. A river's source is sometimes a spring. Shoal: a natural submerged ridge, bank, or bar that consists of, or is covered by, sand or other unconsolidated material, and rises from the bed of a body of water to near ...

  9. Portal:Rivers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:Rivers

    Rivers get their alluvium from erosion, which carves rock into canyons and valleys. Rivers have sustained human and animal life for millennia, including the first human civilizations. The organisms that live around or in a river such as fish, aquatic plants, and insects have different roles, including processing organic matter and predation.