Avulsion is when something rips away suddenly, like when you pull a sock off your foot too fast.
Imagine you're playing with a piece of tape on the floor, and it's stuck to your shoe. If you yank your shoe away quickly, the tape just comes off all at once, that’s avulsion! It doesn’t slowly peel off; it just poof, gone!
Like a River Changing Course
Why It Matters
Avulsion isn’t just for rivers and socks. It happens in our bodies too, when a toenail comes off, that’s avulsion! It doesn’t slowly grow out; it rips away all at once, sometimes with a little pop sound.
So remember: avulsion is like something coming off suddenly, just like your sock or a riverbank. No magic needed, just a quick yank!
Examples
- Imagine a river flowing through a valley, but one day it decides to take a shortcut through a low spot, skipping over parts of its original route.
- During heavy rain, a river overflows its banks and carves out a new path through softer soil.
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See also
- What are alluvial deposits?
- How Does a River Change the Shape of a Landscape Over Time?
- Can a mountain turn into a volcano?
- Geology in a Minute - What is Geology?
- Ask Series | What are Mountains?