When a river meets an ocean and spreads into what looks like a triangular shape, the landform or body of water being created is called a<u> Delta</u>.
Deltas are:
- Formed at the point where a river meets another body of water
- Formed such that they have a triangular shape
- Caused by water erosion
Deltas take a triangular shape at the mouth of a river when the river is meeting a water body such as a lake or ocean.
They form because of water erosion resulting from when the river picks up soil particles and carries them to its mouth where they are deposited and obstruct the flow of water thereby creating a delta.
In conclusion, erosion causes a delta to form when water carries soil and deposits it at its mouth.
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The correct answer is - Stream velocity, channel width, and depth all increase.
When a stream is faced with a sudden increase of water, than the stream is starting to increase in velocity. The velocity is becoming bigger in the lower part of the stream. As the velocity increases, it is followed by an increase in width of the stream because it starts to flood the surrounding area, and because of the much bigger amount of water it also experiences increase in depth.
<span>The term meander here basically means the answer "bend or curve in a stream channel." You may recognize it from the verb "meander", which basically means to wander, twist, and turn through life, basically anything not in a straight, focused direction. "Meander through the woods" means just exploring with no path, "meandering around" can mean a walk through the city or town. As long as it's not a straight path, it's a meander.</span>
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These are 2 actions taken by Barbados, a Caribbean counry. You should have no problem commenting on them. Hope this helps.
Barbados will significantly strengthen its financial risk management of natural disasters and extreme climate events with a US$80 million contingent loan approved by the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) that provides a stable, cost-effective, and quick access instrument to cover immediate extraordinary public expenditures during emergencies caused by severe or catastrophic natural disasters.
In 2003, the Barbados government embraced the Comprehensive Disaster Management (CDM) Strategy. This strategy represented a deliberate attempt by the CDEMA Participating States to holistically incorporate all phases of the disaster management cycle (prevention, mitigation, preparedness and response, recovery, and rehabilitation) while focusing on promoting and accelerating disaster risk reduction initiatives.Barbados is also the CDEMA Central Sub-regional Focal Point (SRFP) for the Eastern Caribbean with response responsibility for the countries of St. Vincent and the Grenadines, Saint Lucia, and the Commonwealth of Dominica. A regional model SRFP Protocol has been developed by CDEMA and Barbados is in the process of adapting it (DEM, 2010).