Kodo Millet PPT made by Ghanshyam bairwa college of Agriculture kumher bhara...
The Formation Of A Waterfall
1.
2. “a cascade of water falling from a height, formed
when a river or stream flows over a precipice or steep
incline”
Upper course
Caused by erosion
Vary in size
3. A waterfall is a steep drop along the course of a
river.
It has a ledge with water cascading into a
characteristic plunge pool at the base.
The rocks at the top of the waterfall are often hard
and resistant, forming a cap rock, and softer rocks
below are undercut.
The waterfall may lie within a gorge and are often
cause of gorges.
Waterfalls often form when a band of resistant rock
lies over softer, less resistant rocks.
4. There is hard rock
overlaying soft rock
along the river bed.
5. Over time the river bed is
eroded by hydraulic
action, solution (usually
on softer rock such as
chalk and limestone) and
abrasion.
The soft rock is less resistant to
erosion than hard rock and
therefore erodes at a faster rate
causing a step along the river bed.
6. Hydraulic
action
continues
to erode
the step
and
creates a
notch over
which the
water
flows.
Hydraulic action also erodes the base of the
waterfall and creates a plunge pool which grows
deeper and extends to behind the water.
The notch
protrudes
further and
the soft rock
is undercut
from the force
of the water.
7. As the notch is
undercut,the
hard rock can
no longer
support itself
so collapses
and falls into
the plunge
pool.
8. Rocks and boulders enter the plunge pool because of the
collapsed notch. Abrasion and hydraulic action are now
working together to erode the plunge pool (it gets deeper)
and notch. (These can sometimes cause potholes.)
Splash back from the
fall hitting the lunge
pool can erode rock
from the face behind
the waterfall. This
contributes to the
debris in the plunge
pool.
9. Erosion continues and the process repeats it’s self. The
plunge pool erodes and the notch is undercut, it will
collapse and hence restart the process. This causes
the water fall to retreat upstream.
10. As the waterfall retreats upstream it forms a steep
sided gorge which the river runs through.
11. Victoria Falls
Zambzi River
Border of Zimbabwe and Zambia
REMEMBER Zs
Not the highest or widest.
It is twice the height of Niagra Falls and twice the width
of Horshoe Falls.
THE LARGEST SHEET OF FALLING WATER IN THE
WORLD.
HEIGHT: 1,708 metres
WIDTH: 108 metres
12. Victoria Falls
Six main gorges:
First Gorge (the one the river falls into at Victoria
Falls)
Second Gorge
Third Gorge (contains Victoria Falls Power Station)
Fourth Gorge
Fifth Gorge
Songwe Gorge