Thank you so so so much!!!! You've made my day! This was so difficult to picture from other videos and books but your diagrams and explanations have really made things easier.
Hi Sir on the formation of a meander at the last part you said the river bend changes position over time because of this lateral ( sideaways) erosion. Is that part of another step ? Thanks
Thanks for your question. The river channel and its bends change position within the river valley because erosion at a bend widens the channel on one side, whilst deposition fills in the channel on the other side of the bend. This moves the bend! Rather than being an extra step, this could be the final part you write in an exam question explaining how meanders form. Hope this helps!
@@mrhuntsgeographychannel2289 Ok sir Thanks so Much for your help you are a really amazing teacher. Do you reckon you could get full Marks on a GCSE Exam Question by saying exactly what you mentioned. Thanks so much!
@@MC10W Thank you for the feedback, it's always great to know the videos are being helpful. Yes, you should achieve full marks repeating the content of the video!
If you imagine a car doing a hand break turn the back of the car is thrown to the outside of the turn. In the same way, the river water is thrown to the outside of the bend due to its momentum. This is why more water is found here than on the inside. The water flows faster because it is deeper. Shallow water will crash into the river bed, rocks and weeds which slows it down due to friction. With deeper water there is less friction because most of the water is travelling over water, not rocks and weeds etc.
You've taught me more in 7 minutes about meanders than my teacher could in 7 months.
relatable
Thank you so so so much!!!! You've made my day! This was so difficult to picture from other videos and books but your diagrams and explanations have really made things easier.
Glad it helped!
I’ve understood this concept so well thanks to you sir! Amazing teaching!
Most welcome!
I finished my geography exam today and I’ve aced the meander and oxbow lake part!
Literally the Freesciencelessons for Geography
Thanks!
The best video about meanders I watched so far. Thanks u
Glad it was helpful!
Thanks a lot Sir. You are one really good teacher.
So nice of you, you’re welcome.
Well detailed explanation.👍. gonna show this to my teacher...
Glad it was helpful!
Hi Sir on the formation of a meander at the last part you said the river bend changes position over time because of this lateral ( sideaways) erosion. Is that part of another step ? Thanks
Thanks for your question. The river channel and its bends change position within the river valley because erosion at a bend widens the channel on one side, whilst deposition fills in the channel on the other side of the bend. This moves the bend! Rather than being an extra step, this could be the final part you write in an exam question explaining how meanders form. Hope this helps!
@@mrhuntsgeographychannel2289 Ok sir Thanks so Much for your help you are a really amazing teacher. Do you reckon you could get full Marks on a GCSE Exam Question by saying exactly what you mentioned. Thanks so much!
@@MC10W Thank you for the feedback, it's always great to know the videos are being helpful. Yes, you should achieve full marks repeating the content of the video!
@@mrhuntsgeographychannel2289 Can you please make a video on the formation of levees. ? Thanks so Much.
@@MC10W That's a good idea and I will complete one soon!
Amazing teaching! Thanks a lot sir
So nice of you
Amazing explanation!
Amazing video - keep up the amazing work!
Thank you! Will do!
Brilliant Explanation. Thank you, Sir.
Glad it was helpful!
Cheers sir, nans doing cartwheels round the bingo club now x
Wow, SOOOOO Interestingggg Love the videos so much cheers pal
Very good explanation.
Glad it was helpful!
Thank you so much. Very useful for my home schooling
Most welcome 😊
Thank you🙏❤
Awesome Videos!
Glad you think so!
Thank u soo much ❤
You're welcome 😊
I don't really get why outer bends have faster flowing water and more water
If you imagine a car doing a hand break turn the back of the car is thrown to the outside of the turn. In the same way, the river water is thrown to the outside of the bend due to its momentum. This is why more water is found here than on the inside.
The water flows faster because it is deeper. Shallow water will crash into the river bed, rocks and weeds which slows it down due to friction. With deeper water there is less friction because most of the water is travelling over water, not rocks and weeds etc.
@@mrhuntsgeographychannel2289 thx I get now
Good video
Thanks
🏋️