Copyright Information: All images are in the public domain and available for free. If you use this image, credit NOAA/NGDC, John Lockridge, Longmont, Colorado.
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This photo shows the San Andreas fault at a road cut on California Highway 14. About two thirds of the way from the bottom to the top is a line. Below the line is the road cut showing non-eroded, convoluted layers. Above the line, the convolutions have been exposed in relief by weathering. Faulting along the San Andreas is visible in the lower left of the photo.
Image Credit: John Lockridge, Longmont, Colorado.
Erosional Landforms
The hydrologic system, which includes all possible paths of motion of Earth's near-surface fluids including air and water, is largely responsible for the variety of landforms found on the continents. Heat from the sun evaporates water from oceans, lakes, and streams. Although most of the water returns directly as precipitation to the oceans, some of the water is recipitated over land as rain or snow. If it is precipitated over land, it then begins its journey back to the sea as "runoff." The relentless action of surface runoff, streams, and rivers, glaciers, and waves sculpts the rock into intriguing and bizarre shapes. This set of slides includes examples of wave erosion, wind and water erosion, valley shapes, and glacial rosion. The views are often dramatic. Many were taken at U.S. National Parks and Monuments.
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