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Geomorphology


 

Geomorphology is the study of landforms, including their origin and evolution, and the processes that shape them. The underlying question is: Why do landscapes look the way they do? The term is derived from the Greek geo, meaning Earth, and morph, meaning form. Geomorphologists seek to understand landform history and dynamics, and predict future changes through a combination of field observation, physical experiment, and numerical modeling. The discipline is practiced within geology, geography, archaeology and civil and environmental engineering. Early studies in geomorphology are the foundation for pedology, one of two main branches of soil science.

Taxonomy

Different geomorphological processes dominate at different spatial and temporal scales. To help categorize landscape scales some geomorphologists use the following taxonomy:

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  • 1st - Continent, ocean basin, climatic zone (~10,000,000 kmē)
  • 2nd - Shield, e.g. Baltic shield, or mountain range (~1,000,000 kmē)
  • 3rd - Isolated sea, Sahel (~100,000 kmē)
  • 4th - Massif, e.g. Massif Centralor Group of related landforms, e.g., Weald (~10,000 kmē)
  • 5th - River valley, Cotswolds (~1,000 kmē)
  • 6th - Individual mountain or volcano, small valleys (~100 kmē)
  • 7th - Hillslopes, stream channels, estuary (~10 kmē)
  • 8th - gully, barchannel (~1 kmē)
  • 9th - Meter-sized features
  • Its use, however, is rare and may be misleading - the nature of landscape change may be better viewed as a continuum of coupled processes.

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