Geomorphology
Geomorphology
Geomorphology
The word “geomorphology" comes from the Greek roots "geo,“ “morph,”
and “logos,” meaning “earth,” “form,” and “study,” respectively.
Therefore, geomorphology is literally “the study of earth forms.”
Importance of Geomorphology
• To understand geomorphological processes of various environment.
• To detect natural and environmental hazards efficiently, e.g.
earthquake, flooding, landslide, tsunami, volcanism etc.
• To identify various landform features and landscapes
• To identify various landform features from satellite images
• Coastal and river research
• Vulnerability studies
• Geology, Geography, Archeology, Engineering, Planning, Mining,
Construction, Urbanization …
Geomorphology concentrates primarily on Quaternary (Pleistocene and Holocene) features
Are the glaciers in New York City?
What past processes created this relict landscape? What modern processes are modifying it?
A perched block is a large block of local or far-travelled rock which has been left
by a melting glacier on top of a moraine or roche moutonnée. They include
striations (abrasion grooves that show the flow direction from northwest to
southeast) and glacial polish (caused when rock was buffed by sediment).
What past processes created this relict landscape? What modern processes are modifying it?
What past processes created this relict landscape? What modern processes are modifying it?
Process:
Erosion
Transportation
Deposition
Products:
Erosional landform features
Geomorphic Processes
A. Terrestrial processes
B. Extra-terrestrial processes, e.g. fall of meteorite (mass/rock from outer space).
Terrestrial processes
1. Exogenetic / Exogenous Processes
2. Endogenetic / Endogenous Processes
Exogenetic/Exogenous Processes
Outer geomorphological processes = exogenetic processes (solar radiation, wind, temperature changes, water) create relief
sculptures, surface features.
Endogenetic Processes
Inner geomorphological processes = endogenetic processes (earthquakes, volcanoes, folding and faulting) create rough
features of the Earth´s relief. e.g. oceanic basins, mountain ranges, oceanic ridges and trenches, rift valleys, folds, faults and
volcanoes, etc.
https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/2013JF002846
Gravity driven processes
https://ida.mtholyoke.edu/bitstream/handle/10166/1069/Farnsworth%20project.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y