enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Interlocking spur - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interlocking_spur

    Interlocking spurs at Ashes Hollow, tributary to the River Severn Interlocking spurs looking up Oxendale Beck, tributary to the River Brathay in Lake District, Cumbria. An interlocking spur, also known as an overlapping spur, is one of any number of projecting ridges that extend alternately from the opposite sides of the wall of a young, V-shaped valley down which a river with a winding course ...

  3. Truncated spur - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Truncated_spur

    A truncated spur is a spur, which is a ridge that descends towards a valley floor or coastline from a higher elevation, that ends in an inverted-V face and was produced by the erosional truncation of the spur by the action of either streams, waves, or glaciers. Truncated spurs can be found within mountain ranges, along the walls of river ...

  4. Spur (topography) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spur_(topography)

    Spur (topography) A spur in the Tatra Mountains. A spur is a lateral ridge or tongue of land descending from a hill, mountain or main crest of a ridge. [1][2] It can also be defined as another hill or mountain range which projects in a lateral direction from a main hill or mountain range. [3]

  5. Valley - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valley

    Interlocking spurs associated with the development of river valleys are preferentially eroded to produce truncated spurs, typical of glaciated mountain landscapes. The upper end of the trough below the ice-contributing cirques may be a trough-end.

  6. Glacier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glacier

    The erosion that creates glacial valleys truncates any spurs of rock or earth that may have earlier extended across the valley, creating broadly triangular-shaped cliffs called truncated spurs. Within glacial valleys, depressions created by plucking and abrasion can be filled by lakes, called paternoster lakes.

  7. Kath kuni architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kath_kuni_architecture

    Kath-Kuni is an indigenous construction technique prevalent in the isolated hills of northern India, especially in the region of Himachal Pradesh Kath is derived from the Sanskrit word kāshth meaning wood and kuni from the word kona meaning corner. It also goes by other names such as kath-kona, kath-ki-kanni in Sarahan region.

  8. Riverscape - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riverscape

    Riverscape. A riverscape[1] (also called river landscape) [2] comprises the features of the landscape which can be found on and along a river. Most features of riverscapes include natural landforms (such as meanders and oxbow lakes) but they can also include artificial landforms (such as man-made levees and river groynes).

  9. Truncated icosahedron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Truncated_icosahedron

    The truncated icosahedron is an Archimedean solid, meaning it is a highly symmetric and semi-regular polyhedron, and two or more different regular polygonal faces meet in a vertex. [5] It has the same symmetry as the regular icosahedron, the icosahedral symmetry, and it also has the property of vertex-transitivity. [6][7] The polygonal faces ...