ژئومورفولوژی-Geomorphology
Geomorphology
The study of 
landforms, including the description, classification, origin, development, and 
history of planetary surface features. Emphasis is placed on the genetic 
interpretation of the erosional and depositional features of the Earth's 
surface. However, geomorphologists also study primary relief elements formed by 
movements of the Earth's crust, topography on the sea floor and on other 
planets, and applications of geomorphic information to problems in environmental 
engineering. 
Fig. 1  The great bar of Pleistocene Lake 
Bonneville at 

 
 
 
Geomorphologists 
analyze the landscape, a factor of immense importance to humankind. Their 
purview includes the structural framework of landscape, weathering and soils, 
mass movement and hillslopes, fluvial features, eolian features, glacial and 
periglacial phenomena, coastlines, and karst landscapes. Processes and landforms 
are analyzed for their adjustment through time, especially the most recent 
portions of Earth history. 
Fig. 2  Surveying large transverse gravel bars 
created by flooding of the Medina River, Texas, in August 
1978.

 
 
 
History
Geomorphology emerged 
as a science in the early nineteenth century with the writings of James Hutton, 
John Playfair, and Charles Lyell. These men demonstrated that prolonged fluvial 
erosion is responsible for most of the Earth's valleys. Impetus was given to 
geomorphology by the exploratory surveys of the nineteenth century, especially 
those in the western 
Perhaps the premier 
geomorphologist was Grove Karl Gilbert. In 1877 he published his report “Geology 
of the 
Fig. 3  Streamlined uplands and large sinuous 
channels in the Chryse Planitia region of Mars. (National Aeronautics and Space 
Administration)

 
 
 
Despite Gilbert's 
example, geomorphologists in the early twentieth century largely worked on 
landscape classification and description according to 
 
Process geomorphology
Modern 
geomorphologists emphasize basic studies of processes presently active on the 
landscape (Fig. 2). This work has benefited from new field, laboratory, and 
analytical techniques, many of which are borrowed from other disciplines. 
Geomorphologists consider processes from the perspectives of pedology, soil 
mechanics, sedimentology, geochemistry, hydrology, fluid mechanics, remote 
sensing, and other sciences. The complexity of geomorphic processes has required 
this interdisciplinary approach, but it has also led to a theoretical vacuum in 
the science. At present many geomorphologists are organizing their studies 
through a form of systems analysis. The landscape is conceived of as a series of 
elements linked by flows of mass and energy. Process studies measure the inputs, 
outputs, and transfers for these systems. Although systems analysis is not a 
true theory, it is compatible with the powerful new tools of computer analysis 
and remote sensing. Systems analysis provides an organizational framework within 
which geomorphologists are developing models to predict selected phenomena. 
 
The future
Geomorphology is 
increasing in importance because of the increased activity of humans as a 
geomorphic agent. As society evolves to more complexity, it increasingly affects 
and is threatened by such geomorphic processes as soil erosion, flooding, 
landsliding, coastal erosion, and sinkhole collapse. Geomorphology plays an 
essential role in environmental management, providing a broader perspective of 
landscape dynamics than can be given by standard engineering practice. 
The phenomenal 
achievements of nineteenth-century geomorphology were stimulated by the new 
frontier of unexplored lands. The new frontier for geomorphology in the late 
twentieth century lies in the study of other planetary surfaces (Fig. 3). Each 
new planetary exploration has revealed a diversity of processes that stimulates 
new hypotheses for features on Earth. Geomorphology must now solve the mysteries 
of meteor craters on the Moon and Mercury, great landslides and flood channels 
on Mars, phenomenally active volcanism on Io, and ice tectonics on Ganymede. See 
also: Coastal landforms; Erosion; Glaciated terrain; Karst topography 
Victor R. Baker 
 
Bibliography
V. R. Baker and S. J. 
Pyne, G. K. Gilbert and modern geomorphology, Amer. J. Sci., 278:97–123, 1978 
A. L. Bloom, 
Geomorphology: A Systematic Analysis of Late Cenozoic Landforms, 3d ed., 1997 
A. F. Pitty, 
Geomorphology: Themes and Trends, 1985 
D. F. Ritter, Process Geomorphology, 3d ed., 1995
Ali 
fazeli=egeology.blogfa.com
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