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  2. Alluvial plain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alluvial_plain

    Use of "alluvial plain" as a general, informal term for a broad flood plain or a low-gradient delta is explicitly discouraged. The NCSS glossary instead suggests "flood plain". [1] Alluvial plains have similar traits to a river delta; however, the river delta will flow into a larger body of water. Alluvial plains generally lack this.

  3. Alluvium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alluvium

    Alluvium and adjacent constituents Alluvium deposits in the Gamtoos Valley in South Africa An alluvial plain in Red Rock Canyon State Park (California) Alluvial river deposits in the Amazon basin, near Autazes, AM, Brazil. The seasonal deposits are extremely fertile and crucial to subsistence farming in the Amazon Basin along the river banks.

  4. Plain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plain

    The difference between a flood plain and an alluvial plain is: a flood plain represents areas experiencing flooding fairly regularly in the present or recently, whereas an alluvial plain includes areas where a flood plain is now and used to be, or areas which only experience flooding a few times a century. [8] Chengdu Plain, Sichuan

  5. Fluvial terrace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fluvial_terrace

    Fluvial terraces are elongated terraces that flank the sides of floodplains and fluvial valleys all over the world. They consist of a relatively level strip of land, called a "tread", separated from either an adjacent floodplain, other fluvial terraces, or uplands by distinctly steeper strips of land called "risers".

  6. Western Corn Belt Plains - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_Corn_Belt_Plains

    Lower Platte Alluvial Plain (47j) [ edit ] The Lower Platte Alluvial Plain is an extension of the broad Platte River Valley (27g) to the west; however, this region is within the Western Corn Belt Plains and contains a combination of vegetation, soils, and climate more similar to other areas in 47.

  7. Mississippi embayment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mississippi_embayment

    The Mississippi embayment is a physiographic feature in the south-central United States, part of the Mississippi Alluvial Plain. It is essentially a northward continuation of the fluvial sediments of the Mississippi River Delta to its confluence with the Ohio River at Cairo, Illinois .

  8. Soil conservation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soil_conservation

    Flooding can bring significant sediments to an alluvial plain. While this effect may not be desirable if floods endanger life or if the sediment originates from productive land, this process of addition to a floodplain is a natural process that can rejuvenate soil chemistry through mineralization. [citation needed]

  9. Foreland basin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foreland_basin

    Veneto-Friuli foreland basin, an alluvial plain in north-eastern Italy. Developed as the result of superposition of three overlapping foreland systems which differed in age and tectonic movement direction as this plain is the foreland of three surrounding chains.