
Severe soil erosion in a wheat field
near Washington State University, USA.
Erosion is a gravity driven process that moves
solids (
sediment,
soil,
rock and other particles) in the
natural environment or their source and deposits them elsewhere. It
usually occurs due to
transport
by wind, water, or ice; by down-slope
creep of soil and other material under the
force of
gravity; or by living organisms,
such as burrowing animals, in the case of
bioerosion.
Erosion is a natural process, but it has been increased
dramatically by human
land use, especially
industrial agriculture,
deforestation, and
urban sprawl. Land that is used for industrial
agriculture generally experiences a significant greater rate of
erosion than that of land under natural vegetation, or land used
for
sustainable
agricultural practices. This is particularly true if tillage is
used, which reduces vegetation cover on the surface of the soil and
disturbs both soil structure and plant roots that would otherwise
hold the soil in place. However, improved land use practices can
limit erosion, using techniques such as
terrace-building, conservation tillage
practices, and tree planting.
A certain amount of erosion is natural and, in fact, healthy for
the
ecosystem. For example,
gravels continuously move downstream in watercourses.
Excessive erosion, however, causes serious problems, such as
receiving water
sedimentation, ecosystem
damage and outright loss of soil.
Erosion is distinguished from
weathering,
which is the process of chemical or physical breakdown of the
minerals in the rocks, although the two processes may occur
concurrently.
Causes

Soil erosion exposing roots
The rate of erosion depends on many factors. Climatic factors
include the amount and intensity of
precipitation, the average temperature, as well as
the typical temperature range, and seasonality, the wind speed,
storm frequency. The geologic factors include the sediment or rock
type, its porosity and permeability, the slope (gradient) of the
land, and whether the rocks are tilted, faulted, folded, or
weathered. The biological factors include ground cover from
vegetation or lack thereof, the type of
organisms inhabiting the area, and the land use.
In general, given similar vegetation and ecosystems, areas with
high-intensity precipitation, more frequent rainfall, more wind, or
more storms are expected to have more erosion. Sediment with high
sand or
silt contents and
areas with steep slopes erode more easily, as do areas with highly
fractured or weathered rock. Porosity and permeability of the
sediment or rock affect the speed with which the water can
percolate into the ground. If the water moves underground, less
runoff is generated, reducing the amount of surface erosion.
Sediments containing more
clay tend to erode
less than those with sand or silt. Here, however, the impact of
atmospheric sodium on erodibility of clay should be
considered.
The factor that is most subject to change is the amount and type of
ground cover. In an undisturbed forest, the mineral soil is
protected by a litter layer and an organic layer. These two layers
protect the soil by absorbing the impact of rain drops. These
layers and the underlying soil in a forest are porous and highly
permeable to rainfall. Typically, only the most severe rainfall and
large hailstorm events will lead to overland flow in a forest. If
the trees are removed by fire or logging, infiltration rates become
high and erosion low to the degree the forest floor remains intact.
Severe fires can lead to significantly increased erosion if
followed by heavy rainfall. In the case of construction or road
building, when the litter layer is removed or compacted, the
susceptibility of the soil to erosion is greatly increased.
Roads are especially likely to cause increased rates of erosion
because, in addition to removing ground cover, they can
significantly change drainage patterns, especially if an embankment
has been made to support the road. A road that has a lot of rock
and one that is "hydrologically invisible" (that gets the water off
the road as quickly as possible, mimicking natural drainage
patterns) has the best chance of not causing increased
erosion.
Many human activities remove vegetation from an area, making the
soil easily eroded.
Logging can cause
increased erosion rates due to
soil
compaction,
exposure of
mineral soil, for example roads and landings. However it is the
removal of or compromise to the forest floor not the removal of the
canopy that can lead to erosion. This is because rain drops
striking tree leaves coalesce with other rain drops creating larger
drops. When these larger drops fall (called
throughfall) they again may reach
terminal velocity and strike the ground
with more energy then had they fallen in the open. Terminal
velocity of rain drops is reached in about 8 meters. Because forest
canopies are usually higher than this, leaf drop can regain
terminal velocity. However, the intact forest floor, with its
layers of leaf litter and organic matter, absorbs the impact of the
rainfall.
Heavy
grazing can reduce vegetation enough
to increase erosion. Changes in the kind of vegetation in an area
can also affect erosion rates. Different kinds of vegetation lead
to different infiltration rates of rain into the soil. Forested
areas have higher infiltration rates, so precipitation will result
in less surface runoff, which erodes. Instead much of the water
will go in subsurface flows, which are generally less erosive. Leaf
litter and low shrubs are an important part of the high
infiltration rates of forested systems, the removal of which can
increase erosion rates. Leaf litter also shelters the soil from the
impact of falling raindrops, which is a significant agent of
erosion. Vegetation can also change the speed of surface runoff
flows, so grasses and shrubs can also be instrumental in this
aspect.
One of the main causes of erosive soil loss in the year 2006 is the
result of
slash and burn treatment of
tropical forest. When
the total ground surface is stripped of vegetation and then seared
of all living organisms, the upper soils are vulnerable to both
wind and water erosion. In a number of regions of the earth, entire
sectors of a country have been rendered unproductive.
For example, on the
Madagascar
high central plateau,
comprising approximately ten percent of that country's land area,
virtually the entire landscape is sterile of vegetation, with gully erosive furrows typically
in excess of 50 meters deep and one kilometer wide. Shifting cultivation is a farming
system which sometimes incorporates the
slash and burn method in some regions of the
world. This degrades the soil and causes the soil to become less
and less fertile.
Effects
Approximately 40% of the world's agricultural land is seriously
degraded. According to the
UN, an area of fertile
soil the size of Ukraine is lost every year because of
drought,
deforestation
and
climate change. In
Africa, if current trends of soil degradation
continue, the continent might be able to feed just 25% of its
population by 2025, according to
UNU's Ghana-based Institute for
Natural Resources in Africa.
When land is overused by animal activities (including humans),
there can be mechanical erosion and also removal of vegetation
leading to erosion.
In the case of the animal kingdom, this
effect would become material primarily with very large animal
herds stampeding such as the Blue Wildebeest on the Serengeti
plain. Even in this case there are broader
material benefits to the ecosystem, such as continuing the survival
of grasslands, that are indigenous to this region. This effect may
be viewed as anomalous or a problem only when there is a
significant imbalance or
overpopulation of one species.
In the case of human use, the effects are also generally linked to
overpopulation. When large number of
hikers use trails or extensive off road vehicle use occurs, erosive
effects often follow, arising from vegetation removal and furrowing
of foot traffic and off road vehicle tires. These effects can also
accumulate from a variety of outdoor human activities, again simply
arising from too many people using a finite land resource.
One of the
most serious and long-running water erosion problems worldwide is
in the People's
Republic of China
, on the middle reaches of the Yellow River
and the upper reaches of the Yangtze River
. From the Yellow River
, over 1.6 billion tons of sediment flows into the
ocean each year. The sediment
originates primarily from water erosion in the Loess Plateau
region of the northwest.
Erosion processes
Gravity erosion

Wadi in Makhtesh Ramon, Israel,
showing gravity collapse erosion on its banks.
Mass wasting is the down-slope
movement of rock and sediments, mainly due to the force of
gravity. Mass movement is an important part of the
erosional process, as it moves material from higher elevations to
lower elevations where other eroding agents such as streams and
glaciers can then pick up the material and
move it to even lower elevations. Mass-movement processes are
always occurring continuously on all slopes; some mass-movement
processes act very slowly; others occur very suddenly, often with
disastrous results. Any perceptible down-slope movement of rock or
sediment is often referred to in general terms as a
landslide. However, landslides can be classified
in a much more detailed way that reflects the mechanisms
responsible for the movement and the velocity at which the movement
occurs. One of the visible topographical manifestations of a very
slow form of such activity is a
scree
slope.
Slump happens on steep
hillsides, occurring along distinct fracture zones, often within
materials like
clay that, once released, may
move quite rapidly downhill. They will often show a spoon-shaped
isostatic depression, in which
the material has begun to slide downhill. In some cases, the slump
is caused by water beneath the slope weakening it. In many cases it
is simply the result of poor engineering along
highways where it is a regular occurrence.
Surface creep is the slow movement of soil and rock debris
by gravity which is usually not perceptible except through extended
observation. However, the term can also describe the rolling of
dislodged soil particles 0.5 to 1.0 mm in diameter by wind
along the soil surface.
Water erosion
Splash erosion is the detachment and airborne
movement of small soil particles caused by the impact of raindrops
on soil.
Sheet erosion is the detachment of soil particles
by raindrop impact and their removal downslope by water flowing
overland as a sheet instead of in definite channels or rills. The
impact of the raindrop breaks apart the soil aggregate. Particles
of clay, silt and sand fill the soil pores and reduce infiltration.
After the surface pores are filled with sand, silt or clay,
overland surface flow of water begins due to the lowering of
infiltration rates. Once the rate of falling rain is faster than
infiltration, runoff takes place. There are two stages of sheet
erosion. The first is rain splash, in which soil particles are
knocked into the air by raindrop impact. In the second stage, the
loose particles are moved downslope by broad sheets of rapidly
flowing water filled with sediment known as sheetfloods. This stage
of sheet erosion is generally produced by cloudbursts, sheetfloods
commonly travel short distances and last only for a short
time.
Rill erosion refers to the
development of small,
ephemeral
concentrated flow paths, which function as both sediment source and
sediment delivery systems for erosion on
hillslopes. Generally, where water erosion rates on disturbed
upland areas are greatest, rills are active. Flow depths in rills
are typically on the order of a few centimeters or less and slopes
may be quite steep. These conditions constitute a very different
hydraulic environment than typically found in channels of streams
and rivers. Eroding rills evolve morphologically in time and space.
The rill bed surface changes as soil erodes, which in turn alters
the hydraulics of the flow. The hydraulics is the driving mechanism
for the erosion process, and therefore dynamically changing
hydraulic patterns cause continually changing erosional patterns in
the rill. Thus, the process of rill evolution involves a feedback
loop between flow detachment, hydraulics, and bed form. Flow
velocity, depth, width, hydraulic roughness, local bed slope,
friction slope, and detachment rate are time and space variable
functions of the rill evolutionary process. Superimposed on these
interactive processes, the sediment load, or amount of sediment in
the flow, has a large influence on soil detachment rates in rills.
As sediment load increases, the ability of the flowing water to
detach more sediment decreases.
Where precipitation rates exceed soil infiltration rates,
runoff occurs. Surface runoff turbulence can often cause
more erosion than the initial raindrop impact.
Gully erosion, also called ephemeral gully erosion, occurs when water flows in narrow channels during or immediately after heavy rains or melting snow. This is particularly noticeable in the formation of hollow way, where, prior to being tarmacked, an old rural road has over many years become significantly lower than the surrounding fields.
A
gully is sufficiently deep that it would not
be routinely destroyed by tillage operations, whereas rill erosion
is smoothed by ordinary farm tillage. The narrow channels, or
gullies, may be of considerable depth, ranging from 1 to 2 feet to
as much as 75 to 100 feet. Gully erosion is not accounted for in
the
revised
universal soil loss equation.
Valley or
stream erosion occurs with continued
water flow along a linear feature. The erosion is both
downward, deepening the valley, and
headward, extending the valley into the
hillside. In the earliest stage of stream erosion, the erosive
activity is dominantly vertical, the valleys have a typical
V cross-section and the stream gradient is
relatively steep. When some
base level is
reached, the erosive activity switches to lateral erosion, which
widens the valley floor and creates a narrow floodplain. The stream
gradient becomes nearly flat, and lateral deposition of sediments
becomes important as the stream
meanders
across the valley floor. In all stages of stream erosion, by far
the most erosion occurs during times of flood, when more and
faster-moving water is available to carry a larger sediment load.
In such processes, it is not the water alone that erodes: suspended
abrasive particles,
pebbles and
boulders can also act erosively as they traverse a
surface.
At extremely high flows,
kolks, or
vortices are formed by large volumes of rapidly
rushing water. Kolks cause extreme local erosion, plucking bedrock
and creating pothole-type geographical features called
Rock-cut basins.
Examples can be seen
in the flood regions result from glacial Lake Missoula
, which created the channeled scablands
in the Columbia Basin
region of eastern Washington
.
Shoreline erosion
Shoreline erosion, which occurs on both exposed and sheltered
coasts, primarily occurs through the action of currents and waves
but sea level (tidal) change can also play a role.
Hydraulic action takes
place when air in a joint is suddenly compressed by a wave closing
the entrance of the joint. This then cracks it.
Wave pounding is when the sheer energy of
the wave hitting the cliff or rock breaks pieces off.
Abrasion or
corrasion is
caused by waves launching seaload at the cliff. It is the most
effective and rapid form of shoreline erosion (not to be confused
with
corrosion).
Corrosion is the dissolving of rock by
carbonic acid in sea water.
Limestone cliffs are particularly vulnerable to
this kind of erosion.
Attrition is where particles/seaload
carried by the waves are worn down as they hit each other and the
cliffs. This then makes the material easier to wash away. The
material ends up as
shingle and sand.
Another significant source of erosion, particularly on carbonate
coastlines, is the boring, scraping and grinding of organisms, a
process termed
bioerosion.
Sediment is transported along the coast in
the direction of the prevailing current (
longshore drift). When the upcurrent amount
of sediment is less than the amount being carried away, erosion
occurs. When the upcurrent amount of sediment is greater, sand or
gravel banks will tend to form. These banks may slowly migrate
along the coast in the direction of the
longshore drift, alternately protecting and
exposing parts of the coastline. Where there is a bend in the
coastline, quite often a build up of eroded material occurs forming
a long narrow bank (a
spit).
Armoured beaches and submerged
offshore
sandbanks may also protect parts of a
coastline from erosion. Over the years, as the shoals gradually
shift, the erosion may be redirected to attack different parts of
the shore.
Ice erosion
Ice erosion is caused by movement of ice,
typically as glaciers.
Glaciers erode
predominantly by three different processes: abrasion/scouring,
plucking, and ice thrusting.
In an abrasion process, debris in the basal ice scrapes along the
bed, polishing and gouging the underlying rocks, similar to
sandpaper on wood. Glaciers can also cause pieces of bedrock to
crack off in the process of plucking. In ice thrusting, the glacier
freezes to its bed, then as it surges forward, it moves large
sheets of frozen sediment at the base along with the glacier. This
method produced some of the many thousands of lake basins that dot
the edge of the Canadian Shield. These processes, combined with
erosion and transport by the water network beneath the glacier,
leave
moraines,
drumlins, ground moraine (till), kames, kame deltas,
moulins, and
glacial erratics in
their wake, typically at the terminus or during
glacier retreat.
Cold weather causes water trapped in tiny rock cracks to freeze and
expand, breaking the rock into several pieces. This can lead to
gravity erosion on steep slopes. The
scree
which forms at the bottom of a steep mountainside is mostly formed
from pieces of rock (soil) broken away by this means. It is a
common engineering problem wherever rock cliffs are alongside
roads, because morning thaws can drop hazardous rock pieces onto
the road.
In some places, water seeps into rocks during the daytime, then
freezes at night. Ice expands, thus, creating a wedge in the rock.
Over time, the repetition in the forming and melting of the ice
causes fissures, which eventually breaks the rock down.
Wind erosion
Wind erosion is the result of material movement by the wind. There
are two main effects. First, wind causes small particles to be
lifted and therefore moved to another region. This is called
deflation. Second, these suspended particles may impact on solid
objects causing erosion by abrasion (ecological succession).
Wind erosion generally occurs in areas with little or no
vegetation, often in areas where there is insufficient rainfall to
support vegetation. An example is the formation of sand
dunes, on a beach or in a desert. Windbreaks (such as
big trees and bushes) are often planted by farmers to reduce wind
erosion.
Soil erosion and climate change
The warmer atmospheric temperatures observed over the past decades
are expected to lead to a more vigorous hydrological cycle,
including more extreme rainfall events. In 1998 Karl and Knight
reported that from 1910 to 1996 total precipitation over the
contiguous U.S. increased, and that 53% of the increase came from
the upper 10% of precipitation events (the most intense
precipitation). The percent of precipitation coming from days of
precipitation in excess of 50 mm has also increased
significantly.
Studies on soil erosion suggest that increased rainfall amounts and
intensities will lead to greater rates of erosion. Thus, if
rainfall amounts and intensities increase in many parts of the
world as expected, erosion will also increase, unless amelioration
measures are taken. Soil erosion rates are expected to change in
response to changes in climate for a variety of reasons. The most
direct is the change in the erosive power of rainfall. Other
reasons include: a) changes in plant canopy caused by shifts in
plant biomass production associated with moisture regime; b)
changes in litter cover on the ground caused by changes in both
plant residue decomposition rates driven by temperature and
moisture dependent soil microbial activity as well as plant biomass
production rates; c) changes in soil moisture due to shifting
precipitation regimes and evapo-transpiration rates, which changes
infiltration and runoff ratios; d) soil erodibility changes due to
decrease in soil organic matter concentrations in soils that lead
to a soil structure that is more susceptible to erosion and
increased runoff due to increased soil surface sealing and
crusting; e) a shift of winter precipitation from non-erosive snow
to erosive rainfall due to increasing winter temperatures; f)
melting of permafrost, which induces an erodible soil state from a
previously non-erodible one; and g) shifts in land use made
necessary to accommodate new climatic regimes.
Studies by Pruski and Nearing indicated that, other factors such as
land use not considered, we can expect approximately a 1.7% change
in soil erosion for each 1% change in total precipitation under
climate change.
Tectonic effects of erosion
The removal by erosion of large amounts of rock from a particular
region, and its deposition elsewhere, can result in a lightening of
the load on the
lower crust and
mantle. This can cause
tectonic or
isostatic
uplift in the region. Research undertaken since the early 1990s
suggests that the spatial distribution of erosion at the surface of
an
orogen can exert a key influence on its
growth and its final internal structure (see
erosion and tectonics).
Materials science
In
materials science, erosion is
the recession of surfaces by repeated localized mechanical trauma
as, for example, by suspended abrasive particles within a moving
fluid. Erosion can also occur from non-abrasive fluid mixtures.
Cavitation is one example.
In hard particle erosion, the
hardness of the impacted
material is a large factor in the
mechanics of the erosion. A soft material will
typically erode fastest from glancing impacts. Harder material will
typically erode fastest from perpendicular impacts. Hardness is a
correlative factor for erosion resistance, but a higher hardness
does not guarantee better resistance. Factors that affect the
erosion rate also include impacting particle speed, size, density,
hardness, and rotation.
Coatings can be
applied to retard erosion, but normally can only slow the removal
of material. Erosion rate for solid particle impact is typically
measured as mass of material removed divided by the mass of
impacting material.
Figurative use
The concept of erosion is commonly employed by
analogy to various forms of perceived or real
homogenization (i.e. erosion of boundaries), "leveling out",
collusion or even the decline of anything from
morals to
indigenous
cultures. It is a common
trope of the English language to
describe as
erosion the gradual, organic mutation of
something thought of as distinct, more complex, harder to pronounce
or more refined into something indistinct, less complex,
easier to pronounce or (disparagingly) less
refined.
Origin of term
The first known occurrence of the term "erosion" was in the 1541
translation by
Robert Copland of
Guy de Chauliac's medical text
The Questyonary of
Cyrurygens. Copland used erosion to describe how
ulcers developed in the
mouth. By 1774 'erosion' was used outside medical
subjects.
Oliver Goldsmith employed
the term in the more contemporary geological context, in his book
Natural History, with the quote
- "Bounds are thus put to the erosion of the earth by
water."
See also
Notes
- Schmittner Karl-Erich and Pierre, 1999. The impact of
atmospheric sodium on erodibility of clay in a coastal
Mediterranean region. Environmental Geology 37/3: 195-206.
- http://treesearch.fs.fed.us/pubs/14744 Concepts about forests
and water Author: Stuart, Gordon W.; Edwards, Pamela J.
- Global food crisis looms as climate change and
population growth strip fertile land
- 2008: The year of global food crisis
- Africa may be able to feed only 25% of its population by
2025
- IPCC. 1995. Second Assessment Synthesis of Scientific-Technical
Information relevant to interpreting Article 2 of the UN Framework
Convention on Climate Change. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change. Geneva, Switzerland. 64 pp.
- Karl, T.R. and R. W. Knight. 1998. Secular trend of
precipitation amount, frequency, and intensity in the United
States. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society
79:231-242.
- Pruski, F. F. and M.A. Nearing. 2002. Runoff and soil loss
responses to changes in precipitation: a computer simulation study.
Journal of Soil and Water Conservation 57(1), 7-16.
- Willett, Sean D., et al., Tectonics, Climate and Landscape
Evolution, Geological Society of America Special Paper 398,
2006 ISBN 0-8137-2398-1 PDF of Introduction
- Finnie, I., Erosion of surfaces by solid particles. Wear, 1960.
3(2): p. 87.
- ASTM G76-07
Further reading
External links