River Landforms (SL IB Geography)

Revision Note

Briley Habib

Expertise

Geography Content Creator

Upper Course Landforms

Waterfalls

  • Occur on horizontally bedded rocks
  • Soft rock is undercut by hydraulic action and abrasion
  • Due to the weight of the water and no support, the waterfall collapses and retreats upstream
  • Over thousands of years, waterfalls may create a gorge

Formation of a waterfall

 Diagram of formation of waterfall for IB SL Geography

The formation of a waterfall

Middle & Lower Course Landforms

Meanders

  • Meanders are formed in rivers due to the combination of erosion and sediment deposition processes
  • The river erodes the outer bank of a bend, creating a cutbank
  • Deposition occurs along the inner bank, forming a point bar
  • As the water flows faster along the outer bend (cutbank) it erodes the bank more, deepening the channel
  • Sediment is deposited along the inner bend (point bar), causing the bank to build up
  • Over time, erosional and depositional processes cause the river to develop a sinuous, meandering course

Cross-section through a meander

meander-formation

Meander formation

Floodplains

  • When a river floods, a floodplain is formed
  • Alluvium is a mixture of sand and gravel that is eroded on the outside of the meander
  • Floodplains are built up by channel deposition
  • Floodplains consist of finer materials

Levees

  • A landform of deposition
  • Levees are raised banks
  • Coarse material is deposited near the channel
  • Finer material is deposited and carried to the floodplain
  • Levees are found on the edge of the river
  • They are formed by repeated flooding
  • When a river floods, the river’s energy is reduced
  • Coarse material is dropped first and then lighter material 
  • Over time, the levees build up from coarse material

Floodplain and levee formation

Diagram of floodplain formation for IB SL Geography

The formation of floodplains and levees

Deltas

  • Deltas are formed when streams flow into standing bodies of water
  • Rivers must carry a large amount of sediment for deltas to form
  • Flocculation increases deposition
  • Bioconstruction increases deposition
  • Delta formation must have a rapid drop in stream velocity
  • There are a variety of delta formations, such as arcuate and bird’s foot

Types of delta

types-of-delta

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Briley Habib

Author: Briley Habib

Briley is an experienced Head of Geography. With over 16 years of teaching experience, Briley was awarded a PGCE from the University of Lancaster and has a degree in European Studies and Human Geography. Briley has worked in a range of schools around the world and has experience of teaching at all levels. Briley is a member of the Geographical Association’s special interest group on diversity and inclusion. She has also written articles for the Teaching Geography Journal, a book chapter on Place-Based Education and a report on Decolonising IB Geography.