Online Encyclopedia

ALLUVIUM

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V01, Page 710 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ALLUVIUM  ,

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soil or
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land deposited by
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running
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water . All streams, from the tiniest rill to the greatest
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river, are continually engaged in transporting downstream solid particles of rock, the product of weathering agencies in the
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area which they drain . Since the capacity of a stream to carry
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matter in suspension is proportional to its velocity, it follows that any circumstance tending to retard the
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rate of flow will induce deposition . Thus a fall in the gradient at any point in the course of a stream; any snag,
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projection or
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dam, impeding the current; the reduced velocity caused by the overflowing of streams in flood and the dissipation of their energy where they enter a lake or the sea, are all contributing causes to alluviation, or the deposition of stream-borne sediment . It is evident from the foregoing remarks, that while even the smallest stream may make deposits of alluvial character it is in the flood-plains and deltas of large rivers that the
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great alluvial deposits are to be found . The finer material constituting alluvium, often described as " silt," is sand and mud . Although it may be exceedingly
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fine-grained, there is usually very little clay in alluvium . The larger materials include gravel of all degrees of coarseness; carbonaceous matter is often an important element . The amount of solid matter borne by large streams is enormous; many rivers derive their names from the colour thereby imparted to the water, e.g . Hwang Ho = Yellow river,
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Missouri =Big Muddy, the Red river, &c . It has been estimated that the
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Mississippi annually carries 4o6} million tons of sediment to the sea; the Hwang Ho 996 million tons; the Po67 million tons . Many shallow lakes have been completely filled with alluvium and their sites are now occupied by fertile plains; this
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process may be seen in operation almost anywhere; a good
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illustration is the delta of the Rhone in Lake Geneva .

Alluvial deposits may be of great

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size . The flood-plain of the Mississippi has an area of 50,000 sq. m.; the great delta of the Ganges and
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Brahmaputra has an area of about 6o,000 sq. m.; that of the Hwang Ho reaches out 300 M. into the sea and has a coastal border of about 400 M . Old alluvial deposits are
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left high above the existing level of many rivers, in the form of " terraces " of gravel and loam, the streams to which these owe their existence having modified their courses and cut deeper channels; such are the alluvial gravels and brick-earths upon which much of " greater
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London " is built . In some regions alluvial deposits are the resting places of gemstones and gold, platinum, &c.; it is from these deposits that the largest nuggets of gold have been obtained . Alluvial soils are almost invariably of great fertility; it is due to the alluvial mud annually deposited by the Nile that the dwellers in
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Egypt have been able to grow their crops for over 4000 years without artificial fertilization .

End of Article: ALLUVIUM
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ALLUVION (Lat. alluvio, washing against)
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C3H5OH ALLYL ALCOHOL

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