LANDFORM

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A 'landform' comprises a geomorphological unit, and is largely defined by its surface form and location in the landscape, as part of the terrain, and as such, is typically an element of topography. Landforms are categorised by features such as elevation, slope, orientation, stratification, rock exposure, and soil type. Landforms include berms, mounds, hills, cliffs, valleys, rivers and numerous other elements.
Oceans and continents exemplify the highest-order landforms. Landform elements are parts of a high-order landform that can be further identified, such as hill-top, shoulder, backslope.
Some generic landform elements are: pits, peaks, channels, ridges, passes, pools, planes; these can be often extracted from a digital elevation model using some automated techniques[1] where the data (various kinds) has been gathered by modern satellites and stereoscopic aerial surveilance cameras. Until recently, compiling the data found in such data sets required time consuming and expensive techniques of "Boots on the ground" at many man-hours. 'Terrain' (or 'relief') is the third or vertical dimension of 'land surface'. When relief is described underwater, the term bathymetry is used. Topography is a further synonym, and is often illustrated in the form of a contour map.
Elementary landforms (segments, facets, relief units) are the smallest homogeneous divisions of the land surface, at the given scale/resolution. These are areas with relatively homogenuous morphometric properties, bounded by lines of discontinuity. A plateau or a hill can be observed at various scales ranging from few hundred meters to hundreds of kilometers. Hence, the spatial distribution of landforms is often scale-dependent as is the case for soils and geological strata.
A number of factors, ranging from plate tectonics to erosion and deposition can generate and affect landforms. Biological factors can also influence landforms— for example, note the role of vegetation in the development of dune systems and salt marshes, and the work of corals and algae in the formation of coral reefs.
Landforms do not include man-made features, such as canals, ports and many harbors; and geographic features, such as deserts, forests, grasslands, and impact craters.
Many of the terms are not restricted to refer to features of the planet Earth, and can be used to describe surface features of other planets and similar objects in the Universe.

Contents
List of landforms
See also
References
External links

List of landforms



Coastal and oceanic landforms.


Anoxic basin

Archipelago

Arch

Back-arc basin

Confluence

Barrier bar & barrier island

Bay & gulf

Headwaters

Beach & raised beach

Beach ridge

Bight

Boondock

cape

Cave

Cliff

Coast

Concordant coastline

Coral reef

Cove

Delta

Discordant coastline

Dune system

Estuary

Fore-arc basin

Geyser

Fjord

Headland

Horn

Inlet

Isthmus

Island, islet, island arc, archipelago & atoll

Lagoon

Machair

Notch

Ocean

Oceanic trench

Ocean ridge & oceanic trench

Peninsula

Ria

Salt marsh

Sea

Sound

Spit

stack & stump

Tombolo

Wave cut platform

Landforms produced by erosion and weathering usually occur in coastal or fluvial environments, and many appear under those headings. Some other erosion landforms that do not fall into those categories include:

canyon

cave

cuesta

dune (an eolian landform not restricted to coastal environments)

erg (an eolian landform not restricted to coastal environments)

gulch

gully

hogback

Lavaka

limestone pavement

rock formations

Tea table


ait

anabranch

arroyo

bar

bayou

braided channel

Carolina Bay

basin

beach

cave

cliff

endorheic basin

exhumed river channel

foreland basin

ice dam

island

lacustrine plain

lake

levee

marsh

meander

oasis

oxbow lake

peneplain

pond

proglacial lake

sedimentary basin

pool

riffle

river

spring

stream

stream terrace

swamp

valley and vale

waterfall

watershed


arête

cirque

crevasse

corrie or cwm

dirt cone

drumlin

drumlin field

esker

fjord

U-shaped valley

glacial horn

glacier

glacier cave

hanging valley

inselberg

kame

kame delta

kettle

moraine

moulin (geology)

mountain & mountain range

outwash fan and outwash plain

pingo

rift valley

side valley

stream terrace

summit

tunnel valley

valley


alas

bluff

butte

cliff

cuesta

dale

dell

escarpment (scarp)

glen

graben

gully

hill

horst

knoll

mesa

mountain

plain

plateau

ravine

ridge

rock shelter

scree

strath

★ & terracettes

vale

valley

valley shoulder


Caldera

Cinder cone

★ volcanic craters, but not impact craters

Geyser

lava dome

lava flow & lava plain

Maar

Mid-ocean ridge

Oceanic trench

Tuya

Vent

Volcanic island

Volcano, shield volcano, mud volcano & composite volcano (or stratovolcano)

★ 'Deposition landform' -- landforms produced by deposition of load or sediment (usually coastal or fluvial).

See also



Terrain

References


1. Automated landform classification using DEMs

External links



Landform Design

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