River stages
A river is often divided into three parts or stages and has features that are specific to each stage.
The table below explains the main features of each stage.
Stage | Main activity | Main features |
Upper course (steep gradient) | Vertical (downward) erosion | Source, tributaries, V-shaped valley, interlocking spurs, waterfalls, rapids, gorges |
Middle course (gentle gradient) | Lateral (sideways) erosion starts, transportation | River beaches (slip-off slopes), meanders, river cliffs |
Lower course (very low gradient) | Deposition | Floodplains, oxbow lakes, lev茅es, delta, estuary |
Stage | Upper course (steep gradient) |
---|---|
Main activity | Vertical (downward) erosion |
Main features | Source, tributaries, V-shaped valley, interlocking spurs, waterfalls, rapids, gorges |
Stage | Middle course (gentle gradient) |
---|---|
Main activity | Lateral (sideways) erosion starts, transportation |
Main features | River beaches (slip-off slopes), meanders, river cliffs |
Stage | Lower course (very low gradient) |
---|---|
Main activity | Deposition |
Main features | Floodplains, oxbow lakes, lev茅es, delta, estuary |
River landscape
The following three diagrams show various types of river landscape.
- sourceThe place where a river starts in its upper course. - the point at which the river starts.
- interlocking spurHill that a river meanders around in a V-shaped valley. When viewed from downstream, these spurs appear to be locked together. - where the river winds between ridges.
- Gorge - a deep valley caused by the wearing back of a waterfall.
- Waterfall - often occur where the river crosses a band of harder rock.
- V-shaped valley - produced in the upper course because the river cuts down faster than the surrounding slopes are eroded.
- Meander - the river starts to erode from side to side.
- River cliff - the river moves faster on the outside of the bend and cuts into the valley side. The erosion undercuts the ground causing it to collapse, leaving a cliff.
- River beach - (slip-off slope) the river moves more slowly on the inside of the bend. It cannot carry the larger pebbles and these are dropped here.
- Oxbow lake - during floodsAn excess of water that does major damage to a region. the river cuts through the neck of a large meander. The outside bend is left as a shallow lake.
- Floodplain - the river is flowing in a very wide, flat valley. When it floods, it spreads over the floodplain.
- Lev茅e - during floods the overflowing river is slowed as it leaves its bed. Silt is deposited along the banks first. Over the years the deposits build up into high ridges.
- estuaryThe open mouth of the river where it meets the sea. - the open mouthThe place where a river meets the sea. of the river, where it meets the sea.