Question:

The sediment deposited at the mouth of a river or stream as it dumps into a larger lake forms?

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a. delta

b. alluvial fan

c. dead zone

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  1. Delta .....

    A delta is a landform where the mouth of a river flows into an ocean, sea, estuary, lake or another river. A delta is formed only when a channel deposits sediment into another body of water. It builds up sediment outwards into the flat area which the river's flow encounters (as a deltaic deposit) transported by the water and set down as the currents slow. Deltaic deposits of larger, heavily-laden rivers are characterized by the main channel dividing amongst often substantial land masses into multiple streams known as distributaries. These divide and come together again to form a maze of active and inactive channels. This hydrogeologic formation is known as a delta. A delta can sometimes be misinterpreted as an alluvial fan. The two terms, however, are not interchangeable. A delta is formed in water and an alluvial fan occurs on land.


  2. The answer is a. delta.  Herodotus the great historian used this term for the Nile river delta because the sediment deposit at its mouth had the shape of the upper-case Greek letter Delta.

    A delta can sometimes be misinterpreted as an alluvial fan. The two terms, however, are not interchangeable. A delta is formed in water and an alluvial fan occurs on land.

  3. Delta.

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