Deposition is when something moves from one place to another and leaves behind a trace, like a clue it left on its way out.
Imagine you have a cookie jar full of your favorite chocolate chip cookies. One day, you take one cookie and eat it. The cookie is gone, but there's still a little crumb left on the table where you sat. That crumb is like a deposition, it’s what was left behind when something moved.
Like a Detective Left a Clue
Think of deposition like a detective leaving a clue at the scene of a crime. The detective (like the cookie) goes somewhere else, but leaves behind a little bit of themselves (like the crumb). Scientists use this idea to figure out what happened in places they can't see, like deep under the ocean or inside a rock.
A Real-Life Example
When snow melts and turns into water, it flows down a hill and carries tiny bits of soil with it. When the water reaches a lake, those bits of soil settle at the bottom. That’s deposition in action, the water carried something from one place to another, and left it behind like a little gift.
Examples
- When you pour water into a glass and let it sit, the dirt settles at the bottom, that's a simple form of deposition.
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See also
- How Does the Nile River Stay So Clear for So Long?
- How Does a River Change the Shape of a Landscape Over Time?
- What are meanders?
- What are rivers like as slow-moving sculptors?
- What are natural rock formations?