Sunday, May 16, 2010

Waterfall

what is a waterfall

A waterfall is a place where flowing water rapidly drops in elevation as it flows over a steep region or a cliff. Some waterfalls are used to generate hydro-electric power.

How does waterfall form?
Waterfalls are most commonly formed when a river is young.
At these times the channel is often narrow and deep. When the river courses over resistant rock, erosion happens slowly, while downstream the erosion occurs more rapidly. As the watercourse increases its velocity at the edge of the waterfall, it plucks material from the riverbed. Whirlpools created in the turbulence as well as sand and stones carried by the watercourse increase the erosion capacity. This causes the waterfall to carve deeper into the bed and to recede upstream. Often over time, the waterfall will recede back to form a canyon or gorge downstream as it recedes upstream, and it will carve deeper into the ridge above it. The rate of retreat for waterfall can be as high as one and half metres per year.
Often, the rock stratum just below the more resistant shelf will be of a softer type, meaning that undercutting due to splashback will occur here to form a shallow cave-like formation known as a rock shelter or plunge pool under and behind the waterfall. Eventually, the outcropping, more resistant cap rock will collapse under pressure to add blocks of rock to the base of the waterfall. These blocks of rock are then broken down into smaller boulders by attrition as they collide with each other, and they also erode the base of the waterfall by abrasion, creating a deep plunge pool or gorge.
Streams become wider and shallower just above waterfalls due to flowing over the rock shelf, and there is usually a deep pool just below the waterfall because of the kinetic energy of the water hitting the bottom. Waterfalls normally form in a rocky area due to erosion. After a long period of being fully formed, the water falling off the ledge will retreat, causing a horizontal pit parallel to the waterfall wall. Eventually, as the pit grows deeper, the waterfall collapses to be replaced by a steeply sloping stretch of river bed
A river sometimes flows over a large step in the rocks that may have been formed by a fault line. Waterfalls can occur along the edge of a glacial trough, whereby a stream or river flowing into a glacier continues to flow into a valley after the glacier has receded or melted. The large waterfalls in Yosemite Valley are examples of this phenomenon. The rivers are flowing from hanging valleys. Another cause of waterfall formation is where two rivers met and one flows faster then the other. The difference in the level of the beds may result in what is called a hanging valley.

Wang Zhaolin

4 comments:

  1. So, are waterfalls generally formed due to erosion? Maybe you could add some images of the examples you shown like the waterfalls in Yosemite Valley(:

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  2. This post is good:) i never knew how water falls were formed! yeh! maybe you could have included some photos so that we can have a clearer idea.
    RIKA

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  3. This post is quite in detail already... Just want to know more details that can be applied to China :)

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  4. I think Water Fall be used to generate power like electricity, people can put the turbine where the water falls and the turbine will spin and electricity will be generated (:

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