geomorphology in English

noun
1
the study of the physical features of the surface of the earth and their relation to its geological structures.
The western tip of the South Alkyonides Fault is exposed in the surface geology and geomorphology of the Perachora Peninsula.

Use "geomorphology" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "geomorphology" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "geomorphology", or refer to the context using the word "geomorphology" in the English Dictionary.

1. Key words: riverbanks, damsite geology, geomorphology, airphoto interpretation, remote sensing.

2. Alen does research in Geomorphology, Geography, Tectonic Geology, Ecotourism and Geoecology

3. Geomorphology has now achieved full stature as a branch of geology.

4. Throughout the project, Close collaboration was maintained with experts in geology, geomorphology, and historical geography.

5. 26 According to many researchers achievement , the response of fluvial geomorphology to tectonic movement is discussed.

6. Synonyms for Chorography include terrain, landscape, topography, geography, geomorphology, countryside, land, country, ground and turf

7. Climate geomorphology extensive use of climatology and mathematical statistical methods, and the corresponding physical and chemical methods.

8. The concentration on arid and glacial regions was probably also partly instrumental in the development of climatic geomorphology.

9. 28 The concentration on arid and glacial regions was probably also partly instrumental in the development of climatic geomorphology.

10. 14 In the light of this, the way forward in climatic geomorphology, already recognized in studies of fluvial catchments, becomes evident.

11. 13 Until this occurs, there can be few spectacular advances such as those achieved recently in fluvial and slope geomorphology.

12. Acclivity (plural acclivities) ( geomorphology ) A slope or inclination of the earth, as the side of a hill, considered as ascending , in opposition to declivity , …

13. Fifteen 100 m long transects were placed using random coordinates within two soil–geomorphology units (flat alluvial terraces and dissected ridge-slope-swale terrain).

14. Cuesta (plural Cuestas) (geomorphology) A hill or ridge with a gentle slope on one side, and a steep slope on the other

15. Badlands pre & post-processing climate landscape-dynamics marine geomorphology geosciences stratigraphy sediment-transport Python GPL-3.0 7 12 0 0 Updated Jan 25, 2020

16. In sedimentary geology and fluvial geomorphology, Avulsion is the rapid abandonment of a river channel and the formation of a new river channel

17. Bioturbation refers to the biological reworking of soils andsediments,anditsimportanceforsoilprocessesand geomorphology was first realised by Charles Darwin, who devoted his last scientific book to the subject

18. 8 During the Pliocene to early Pleistocene strong NW-SE crustal extension resulted in disintegration of the planation geomorphology and formation of a graben basin in the area.

19. Acclivity ( plural Acclivities ) ( geomorphology) A slope or inclination of the earth, as the side of a hill, considered as ascending, in opposition to declivity, or descending; an upward slope; ascent

20. Considering the observation of the scarp of the surface rupture and the analysis of geomorphology, we can judge that the magnitude of the last event is similar to the 12 event.

21. Does the ground where soldiers are fighting have any real bearing on the number of casualties they take? During a 10-year study of the geomorphology of Civil War Battlefields, two geologists found that in some cases it did.

22. WikiMatrix The difference in geomorphology and terrain between the two sides, results in differentiated Bioclimatology , has influence in the distribution of major types of ecosystems of the island, such as lotic (river) systems in the area of the massif and its valleys

23. The shape of 99 of the world's 425 Atolls has been studied using three types of measurement: form ratios derived from fluvial geomorphology (Miller's Circularity Ratio, R c; Schumm's Elongation Ratio, R e; Horton's Form Factor, F), best-fit regular geometric figures (giving an Ellipticity Index, I e), and actual measurement of shape, by means of best-fit octagons and by the radial line method