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A. Slope of the river
B. Discharge of the river
C. Size of the river's headwaters

2007-03-23 00:29:33 · 5 answers · asked by Red 1 in Science & Mathematics Earth Sciences & Geology

5 answers

I think C. Size of the river's headwaters as A and B are very influential in the ability of a river to erode material

2007-03-23 00:37:01 · answer #1 · answered by Night_nurse 2 · 0 0

C The size of the head waters would little bearing on the level of erosion a river could achieve.

2007-03-23 01:02:29 · answer #2 · answered by rico3151 6 · 0 0

not all inclusive, right here are some components that impact streams' skill to hold sediment: a million. Discharge (defined via x-sectional section expanded via velocity): as a rule, rivers with larger discharge can carry extra sediment and bigger grain sizes than rivers with decrease discharge. 2. River meanders (river bends): rivers will erode the "concave" edge of the meander on an identical time as depositing sediment on the "convex" edge of the meander. that's by way of adjustments in velocity in the time of distinctive areas of the river flow section. 3. Slope: retaining discharge consistent, streams on a steeper slope can flow sediments extra effectively than those on much less steep slopes. 4. Temperature: water at decrease temperature can carry extra sediment than water at larger temperature (that's by way of viscosity)

2016-10-19 10:03:55 · answer #3 · answered by scafuri 4 · 0 0

obviously there the size of the river's headwaters

2007-03-23 00:54:57 · answer #4 · answered by anusen1970 2 · 0 0

C

2007-03-23 01:48:11 · answer #5 · answered by 22 4 · 0 0

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