10.3.8

Soil Erosion

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Soil Erosion

Soil erosion leaves the land infertile by the surface layer of soil being either washed or blown away.

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Causes

  • Degrading soil by overusing it, so it becomes useless.
  • Not giving the soil enough time to recover between crop cycles.
  • Deforestation means that there is no cover or protection for soil.
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Consequences of soil erosion

  • G = global, L = local.
  • Rivers get lots of sediment washed into them.
    • This means that the rivers are more likely to flood (L).
  • Land isn’t suitable for farming any more (G) (L).
  • Farmers are forced to change their culture/traditions to survive (L) (G).
  • Dust storms (e.g. America’s dust bowl in the 1930s) (L).
  • Soil erosion has similar consequences to desertification (low output, expanding deserts, loss of income for farmers, food scarcity, forced migrations, poverty etc).

Jump to other topics

1Paper 1 - Changing River Environnments

2Paper 1 - Changing Coastal Environments

3Paper 1 - Changing Ecosystems

4Paper 1 - Tectonic Hazards

5Paper 1 - Climate Change

6Paper 2 - Changing Populations

7Paper 2 - Changing Towns & Cities

8Paper 2 - Development

9Paper 2 - Changing Economies

10Paper 2 - Resource Provision

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