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A - B - C
- D - E - F
- G - H - I -
J - K - L -
M - N -
O
P - Q - R - S -
T - U - V - W
- X - Y - Z |
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A |
|
Aquifer |
|
An underground water
system that is contained within the pores of rock and
sediment. Wells and tap aquifer systems. |
|
Angle of repose |
|
The greatest angle
of steepness a slop can have while still maintaining its
sediment. |
|
Anoxic |
|
Lacking oxygen. |
|
B |
|
Bed |
|
The bottom of a
stream, usually bedrock. |
|
Bedrock |
|
The solid layers of
rock found under sand, dirt or water. |
|
Block |
|
A type of waterfall,
most commonly a curtain that occurs in a wide river. |
|
Brink |
|
The top of the
waterfall. More specifically, the top edge from which water
falls. Also referred to as the Crest. |
|
Brook |
|
A stream,
smaller than a creek, commonly considered to be fed
by a natural spring. |
|
C |
|
Cairn |
|
An unnatural pile of rocks, often organized,
built as a landmark or work of art. |
|
Calcium Carbonate |
|
Calcium carbonate is
a chemical compound, with chemical formula CaCO3. It is
commonly used medicinally as a calcium supplement or as an
antacid. Calcium carbonate is the active ingredient in
agricultural lime. It is a common substance found as rock in
all parts of the world and is the main component of
seashells and the shell of snails. It is usually the
principle cause of hard water.
(courtesy of
wikipedia.org) |
|
Canadian
Shield |
|
A large area of
exposed Precambrian Rock in North America. The Canadian
Shield was the first part of North America to be permanently
elevated above sea level and has remained almost wholly
untouched by successive encroachments of the sea upon the
continent.
Diagram. |
|
Canyon |
|
A narrow, steep
valley, ravine or canyon, walled by cliffs, often carved
over time by water. A Gully, Ravine or
Gorge. |
|
Caprock |
|
The top layer of
bedrock at the crest of the waterfall. |
|
Cascade |
|
A type of waterfall
that flows down a rock face with many jumps. The slope is
usually close to 45%. More consistent and defined jumps are
commonly referred to as a Staircase or Tiered
falls.
Most Cascade falls in NY are due to bedrock of soft Shale
stone.
To the right, a cascade falls from Letchworth State Park. |
 |
|
Cataract |
|
A large waterfall
(by volume or height). Also used to describe river rapids
with noticeable descent. |
|
Causeway |
|
A pathway or road,
elevated by a bank, usually across water or wetland. See
Otisco Lake. |
|
Channel |
|
An eroded portion of
the stream bed that directs the stream flow. A
Channel can be a small groove or a large gorge.
Right: Water flows through a channel cut through the rock at
Watkins Glen State Park. |
 |
|
Chute |
|
A narrow path of
water through rock. Usually turbulent and with high current. |
|
Cirque |
|
An
amphitheatre-like, cliff-walled valley, carved by glaciers
and enhanced by water erosion and ice cleavage. The highest
cliff is often called the headwall. |
|
Classical |
|
A waterfall that is
as wide as it is high. |
|
Clastic rock |
|
A type of rock
formed from fragments of pre-existing rock. |
|
Clay |
|
A hydrous (wet) mix
of aluminum and silicate minerals. Usually formed by
weathering of silicate rocks (many sedimentary rocks,
including shale). Clay retains its water better than
mud, as the water is chemically bound to the minerals. This
binding, along with the small size, allows for high
plasticity. Clay formations will expand and contract
depending on water content, yielding unstable geology. |
|
Concretion |
|
A bulbous mineral
concretion usually found within a layer of sedimentary rock.
Often called Turtle Stones. They are formed by
minerals found within rock layer precipitating towards a
nucleus (mineral or bone) and under great pressure, form a
rock, harder than the surrounding rock. |
|
Conglomerate |
|
A type of
sedimentary rock comprised of a variety of sand, pebbles,
small stones and sometimes shells or fossils. Sometimes
called a Concretion. |
|
Contour lines |
|
the lines on a
topographic (topo) map that indicate elevation. The closer
together the lines are, the steeper the slope. |
|
Crampons |
|
Crampons are a framework of
spikes that are attached to boots to provide traction on
snow and ice. (courtesy of
wikipedia.org)
It is recommended
that you use crampons when hiking in gorges and
stream beds in the winter. |
|
Creek |
|
A stream of
small size. |
|
Crest |
|
The top of the
waterfall. More specifically, the top edge from which water
falls. Also referred to as the Brink. |
|
Current |
|
The flow of water in
a stream. |
|
Curtain |
|
A waterfall that has
more width than height. |
|
|
|
D |
|
Discharge |
|
A measurement of the
amount of water in a stream that passes a certain point over
a period of time. (Usually cubic feet/second). |
|
Drainage Basin |
|
See Watershed. |
|
Drop |
|
Any place along the
stream where water falls from one point to another. It
could be a free-fall or maintain contact with rock behind,
but the fall must be at a higher gradient then the
surrounding stream's gradient. |
|
E |
|
Ephemeral |
|
Changing, not
constant; often used in reference to bodies of water that
hold water for part of the year and are dry at other times. |
|
Erosion |
|
Erosion is the
displacement of solids (soil, mud, rock, and other
particles) by the agents of wind, water, ice, movement in
response to gravity, or living organisms (in the case of
bioerosion).
(courtesy of
wikipedia.org) |
|
Erratics |
|
Seemingly
out-of-place boulders carried to their current location by
glacier movement.
Identifiable by their roundness and difference of
composition from the bedrock. |
|
Escarpment |
|
In geology, an
escarpment is a transition zone between different
physiogeographic provinces that involves an elevation
differential, often involving high cliffs. Most commonly, an
escarpment, also called a scarp (from the German word scharf
meaning sharp), is a transition from one series of
sedimentary rocks to another series of a different age and
composition. In such cases, the escarpment usually
represents the line of erosional loss of the newer rock over
the older.
(courtesy of
wikipedia.org)
Specifically in
Upstate NY, the
Niagara,
Onondaga and Portage escarpments contribute
to most dramatic gorges and waterfalls. The Niagara
Escarpment is responsible for Niagara Falls and the three
falls of Rochester, NY. The Onondaga Escarpment contains
Akron Falls, Chittenango Falls, Oatka Falls, Serenity Falls
and many others. The Portage Escarpment leads to Ithaca
falls. |
|
F |
|
Face |
|
The vertical (or
near vertical) surface of a cliff. |
|
Fan |
|
A type of
horsetail waterfall that spreads horizontally, fanning
out, considerably before hitting the base of the falls. |
|
Finger Lake |
|
The linear,
North-to-South glacial lakes of upstate NY are some of the
deepest in America. Early map-makers thought they resembled
the fingers of a hand, and dubbed them the Finger Lakes. The
longest being Cayuga. Seneca is the largest. There are 11
total: Otisco Lake, Skaneateles Lake Owasco Lake, Cayuga
Lake, Seneca Lake, Keuka Lake, Canandaigua Lake, Honeoye
Lake, Canadice Lake, Hemlock Lake and Conesus Lake. Some
other adjacent lakes (Cazenovia and Oneida Lakes to the
east) are often considered to be part of the Finger Lakes as
well. |
|
Floodplain |
|
Flatlands in the
watershed of a body of water that has a history of and thus
future potential for seasonal flooding. |
|
Fossil |
|
Fossils (from Latin
fossus, literally "having been dug up") are the mineralized
or otherwise preserved remains or traces (such as
footprints) of animals, plants, and other organisms. The
totality of fossils and their placement in fossiliferous
(fossil-containing) rock formations and sedimentary layers
(strata) is known as the fossil record. The study of fossils
is called paleontology.
(courtesy of
wikipedia.org) |
|
Friable |
|
Easily broken apart
or burrowed through. |
|
G |
|
GIS |
|
Geographic
Information Systems. A database format that links data
tables to maps with the capacity to easily manipulate data
geographically. |
|
Gorge |
|
A narrow, steep
valley, ravine or canyon, walled by cliffs, often carved
over time by water.
Right: a section of the gorge wall at Stony Brook State
Park. |
 |
|
Glacier |
|
A glacier is a large,
long-lasting river of ice that is formed on land and moves
in response to gravity. A glacier is formed by multi-year
ice accretion in sloping terrain. Glacier ice is the largest
reservoir of freshwater on Earth, and second only to oceans
as the largest reservoir of total water. Glaciers can be
found on every continent except Australia. Geologic features
associated with glaciers include end, lateral, ground and
medial moraines that form from glacially transported rocks
and debris; U-shaped valleys and corries (cirques) at their
heads, and the glacier fringe, which is the area where the
glacier has recently melted into water.
(courtesy of
wikipedia.org) |
|
Glen |
|
A Gorge. |
|
Granite |
|
Granite is a common
and widely-occurring type of intrusive, felsic, igneous
rock. Granites are usually a white or buff color and are
medium to coarse grained, occasionally with some individual
crystals larger than the groundmass forming a rock known as
porphyry. Granites can be pink to dark gray or even black,
depending on their chemistry and mineralogy.
(courtesy of
wikipedia.org) |
|
Grist
Mill |
|
A mill where grain
is ground into flour. |
|
GPS |
|
Global Positioning
System. A technology that uses US military satellites to
triangulate the position of a GPS receiver. Can also provide
elevation data. Software, in conjunction with a GPS receiver
can provide direction, speed and provide navigational data.
GPS receivers can be accurate within 2 meters (6'). |
|
Gulf |
|
A Gorge. |
|
H |
|
Hanging Valley |
|
A hanging valley is
a tributary valley with the floor at a higher relief than
the main channel into which it flows. They are most commonly
associated with glacial valleys when a tributary glacier
flows into a glacier of larger volume. The main glacier
erodes a deep U-shaped valley with nearly vertical sides
while the tributary glacier, with a smaller volume of ice,
makes a shallower U-shaped valley. Since the surfaces of the
glaciers were originally at the same elevation, the
shallower valley appears to be ‘hanging’ above the main
valley. Often, if water is flowing through the upper glacial
valley, a waterfall will form.
(courtesy of
wikipedia.org) |
|
Horsetail |
|
A type of waterfall
that maintains some contact with the rock behind it. Usually
thin.
Right: a small horsetail falls across from the middle falls
at Letchworth State Park. |
 |
|
J |
|
Joint |
|
A defined vertical
rock fracture. |
|
Jump |
|
A type of waterfall
that freefalls from the caprock to the base. Also known as a
Ledge or Plunge, the bedrock behind the falls
is eroded further than the stronger more resistant
caprock, sometimes leading to a shallow cavern behind
the falls.
The freefall portion of the waterfall. |
|
K |
|
Kame |
|
An irregularly
shaped hill or mound composed chiefly of poorly sorted sand
and gravel deposited by a sub-glacial stream as an alluvial
fan or delta. It can have an irregular shape. Kames are
often associated with kettles.
(courtesy of
wikipedia.org) |
|
Kettle |
|
A depression, often
filled with water - a kettle lake, in glacial moraine or
outwash sediments. A kettle is formed when a large block of
ice separated from a retreating (melting) glacier becomes
buried by sediments. Later, when the buried ice block melts,
the sediment above collapses and a depression is formed in
the landscape.
(courtesy of
wikipedia.org)
Devil's Bathtub of
Mendon Ponds, Monroe County, is a notable glacial
kettle. |
|
Knickpoint |
|
A location in the
stream where there is a sharp change in the slope of the
channel such as a waterfall (steep slope) or lake (no
slope). |
|
L |
|
Ledge |
|
A type of waterfall
that freefalls from the caprock to the base. Also known as a
Plunge or Jump, the bedrock behind the falls
is eroded further than the stronger more resistant
caprock, sometimes leading to a shallow cavern behind
the falls. |
|
Limestone |
|
A sedimentary
rock, consisting mostly of Calcite, found is locations
where prehistoric marine environments once existed.
Limestone colors vary depending on composition. Pure
Limestone is white. Grey indicates clay impurities. While
red is usually colored by iron oxide. Limestone layers are
generally thicker than shale layers. |
|
Lithification |
|
The process in which
sediments compact under pressure and start to form rock.
Fluids are lost from the sediments as pressure tightens the
space in between grains. Heat generated from the pressure
contributes to the bonding of sediment. This process can
take thousands of years. |
|
M |
|
Metamorphic rock |
|
A type of rock that
is the result of the transformation of a pre-existing rock
type by heat and/or pressure. Examples of metamorphic rock:
Marble, Slate, Gneiss and Schist. |
|
Meromictic Lake |
|
A lake in which the
layers of water do not mix. Lakes and ponds usually turn
over their waters as a result of seasonal temperature
change. Meromictic lakes are either very deep and have steep
sides or are highly saline at the bottom, preventing
turn-over. These lakes generally have massive collections of
undisturbed sediments at the bottom with very slow rates of
decay. |
|
Mouth |
|
The outlet where the
stream empties into a pond, lake or ocean. |
|
N |
|
Newborn falls |
|
A relatively new
falls, usually not well defined and always close to the main
body of water they empty into. Because they have not been
around for long, they have not eroded away the rock enough
to recede further way from the gully they empty into. |
|
O |
|
Oligotrophic |
|
An environment that
offers little to sustain life. Skaneateles Lake is an
oligotrophic Finger Lake |
|
Oncolite |
|
An rare, spherical
lime rock formed by blue-green algae growth on a pebble or
shell core. Hard when wet, brittle when dry. |
|
P |
|
Paratoid gland |
|
A gland found on
some amphibians (toads, newts, salamanders) that contains
toxins or foul-tasting chemicals to ward off predators. |
|
Plunge |
|
A type of waterfall
that freefalls from the caprock to the base. Also known as a
Ledge or Jump, the bedrock behind the falls is
eroded further than the stronger more resistant caprock,
sometimes leading to a shallow cavern behind the falls.
Right: Cavern Cascade at Watkins Glen State Park is actually
a 50 ft. Plunge. |
 |
|
Plunge Pool |
|
A pool at the base
of a falls. formed by the erosion of sediment stirred by the
waterfall. |
|
Pool |
|
A Section of a
stream where the water deep and slow moving. |
|
Pothole |
|
Smooth bowl-shapes
ground into rock by small rocks and/or sand swirling in the
current of a whirlpool or at the base of waterfalls. |
|
Precambrian
rock |
|
Rock formed during the Proterozoic and the
Archaean aras that formed the first continents. The oldest
rock on Earth. |
|
Punchbowl |
|
A type of waterfall
that descends in constricted form, into a pool at the base,
rather than cascading over rocks at the base.
Right: water takes a plunge into a punchbowl at Watkins Glen State Park. |
 |
|
|
|
R |
|
Rapids |
|
A section of the
stream where the current is above normal and rocks and
debris create turbulence known as "whitewater." |
|
Ribbon |
|
A waterfall much
taller than it is wide. |
|
Riffle |
|
A Section of a
stream where the water is more turbulent, shallow and
the flow is reduced. Identifiable by aerated water flow. |
|
River |
|
A large stream,
usually used as a waterway. |
|
Run |
|
A Section of a
stream where the flow is smooth and uninterrupted. |
|
S |
|
Sandstone |
|
Sandstone is a
sedimentary rock composed mainly of sand-size mineral or
rock grains. Most sandstone is composed of quartz and/or
feldspar because these are the most common minerals in
earth's crust. Like sand, sandstone may be any color, but
the most common colors are tan, brown, yellow, red, gray,
and white.
(courtesy of
wikipedia.org) |
|
Sediment |
|
Sand, pebbles or any
particulate matter carried and deposited by water flow. |
|
Sedimentary rock |
|
One of the three
main rock groups (along with igneous and
metamorphic rocks) and is formed in three main ways—by
the deposition of the weathered remains of other rocks
(known as clastic sedimentary rocks); by the deposition of
the results of biogenic activity; and by precipitation from
solution. Sedimentary rocks include common types such as
chalk, limestone, sandstone, and shale.
(courtesy of
wikipedia.org) |
|
Segmented |
|
Used to describe a
waterfall that splits into 2 or more distinct drops.
Right: a cascading falls at the private park, Sugar Creek
Glen, is segmented into 2 distinct drops. |
 |
|
Series |
|
A group of
waterfalls, usually separated by pools or sections of the
stream. Sometimes one is not visible from another. Sometimes
considered part of the same falls.
Right: a series of small curtain falls at
Letchworth State Park. |
 |
|
Shale |
|
A type of
sedimentary rock, usually grey, formed from mud or fined
grain silt, deposited in thin, easily fractured and porous
layers. Because of its ease of erosion and common presence,
shale contributes greatly to the characteristic NY state
waterfall look. |
|
Staircase |
|
A type of waterfall
that flows a series of consistent steps, resembling a
staircase. |
|
Stratigraphy |
|
A branch of geology,
studying rock and sediment layers. |
|
Stratum |
|
A layer of rock or
soil, of the same composition, distinguishable (but not
necessarily of different composition) from surrounding
layers. Lower stratum are geologically older than those
above (except in rare cases). This is referred to as
the Law of Superposition. |
|
Stream |
|
A body of water with
a detectable current and confined within a bed. (Also
referred to as a brook or creek). |
|
Superfund |
|
A federal law that
budgets for the clean-up of highly contaminated areas.
Prioritizing residential areas and sites where contamination
can spread. |
|
Superposition
(Law of) |
|
A principle of
geology that states that rock and sediment layers are
arranged in times sequence, with older layers on the bottom
and more recent layers on the top. Geological activity can
disrupt this order. |
|
T |
|
Talus |
|
A pile a debris
fallen from the cliff edge, usually forming a slope against
the cliff face or waterfall. |
|
Tiered |
|
A type of waterfall
that flows a series of distinct steps or rock layers. A type
of cascade with more distinct steps or jumps.
Also referred to as staircase if the jumps resemble
stairs. |
|
Topographic map |
|
A geographic map
indicating elevation using contour lines. Commonly referred
to as Topo maps. An excellent tool for locating waterfalls.
There are several rules to note when viewing topographic
maps:
The rule of Vs: sharp-pointed vees usually are in
stream valleys, with the drainage channel passing through
the point of the vee, with the vee pointing upstream. This
is a consequence of erosion.
The rule of Os: closed loops are normally uphill on
the inside and downhill on the outside, and the innermost
loop is the highest area. If a loop instead represents a
depression, some maps note this by short lines radiating
from the inside of the loop, called "hachures".
Spacing of contours: close contours indicate a steep
slope; distant contours a shallow slope. Two or more contour
lines merging indicates a cliff.
(see
wikipedia.org
for more information). |
|
Tributary |
|
A stream that
contributes to another. One that does not empty into an
Ocean or Lake, but contributes to the flow of another
stream or river (usually a larger more defined
stream). |
|
Turbidity |
|
Water's ability to
hold particulates. Water of high turbidity is cloudy and
considered dirty. |
|
Turtle Stone |
|
See Concretion. |
|
V |
|
Valley |
|
A valley is a
landform, which can range from a few square miles (square
kilometers) to hundreds or even thousands of square miles in
area. It is typically a low-lying area of land, surrounded
by higher areas such as mountains or hills.
(courtesy of
wikipedia.org) |
|
W |
|
Whirlpool |
|
A section of a
stream where the current flows in a circular path towards
the center of the circle. In streams and rivers whirlpools
can vary in size and strength. They are often found at the
bottom of waterfalls on the fringe of pools or any location
where fast-moving water is adjacent to slow-moving pools.
Right: A small whirlpool at Watkins Glen State Park |
 |
|
Watershed |
|
The region
surrounding a waterway from which it receives water. Also
known as a Drainage Basin. |