A river is like a very patient kid who keeps digging and moving things around until everything looks new.
Rivers are like long, flowing water highways that move dirt and rocks from one place to another. Over time, they can make big changes to the land, just like how you might dig a hole in your sandbox or build a little mountain with sand.
How Rivers Make Changes
Imagine you're playing with water and dirt in a bucket. Every time the water flows, it carries some of the dirt with it. This is like when you pour water over wet sand, the sand moves around.
Over many years, rivers do this nonstop. They dig deeper into the ground where they start, making a valley. At the same time, they drop off all that dirt and rock at the other end, creating a plain or even a delta, like when you spill sand from one side of your sandbox to the other.
Rivers Keep Changing
Rivers are always working, some days they're calm, some days they're wild. When they get angry (like during a big storm), they carry more dirt and rocks, making bigger changes faster. Over time, these little changes add up, changing the shape of the Earth just like you change your sandbox every day.
Examples
- A small stream turning into a big valley after many years.
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See also
- What are rivers like as slow-moving sculptors?
- What are meanders?
- What is erosion?
- Why Do Mountains Erode?
- What Makes a River Flow Backward?