By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Identify and explain river (fluvial) landforms: V-valley, gorge, waterfall, meander, ox-bow lake, delta, alluvial fan — and the stage of river development they belong to
  • 2Describe glacial erosional landforms (cirque, arête, horn, U-valley, hanging valley) and depositional landforms (moraines: terminal, lateral, medial, ground)
  • 3Explain wind (aeolian) erosional features (deflation hollows, inselbergs, mushroom rocks) and depositional landforms (barchans, seifs, loess)
  • 4Describe coastal landforms: erosional (cliffs, stacks, arches, caves) and depositional (beaches, bars, spits, lagoons)
  • 5Explain karst topography formed by chemical weathering of limestone: sinkholes, dolines, caverns, stalactites, stalagmites
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Why this chapter matters
Every river bend, coastal cliff, sand dune, and glacial lake was shaped by a specific agent working over centuries. Knowing the agent — river, glacier, wind, or sea — and its signature landforms lets you read any landscape like a map. This chapter is consistently high-scoring because it produces visual, descriptive questions (draw and label a river valley, identify a glacial landform) that reward precise terminology.

Landforms and their Evolution

"Every landscape is a chapter in an ongoing autobiography — written by water, wind, ice, and gravity."

1. Chapter Overview

This chapter picks up where Geomorphic Processes left off. Running water, groundwater, glaciers, wind, and sea waves each create DISTINCTIVE landforms — erosional (what's carved out) and depositional (what's left behind). The chapter also explains the concept of EROSIONAL CYCLES: landscapes evolve through YOUTH, MATURE, and OLD stages.


2. Running Water (Fluvial Landforms)

Erosional Landforms

LandformDescription
V-shaped ValleyYouthful stage — river CUTS DOWN (vertical erosion). Deep, narrow.
Gorge/CanyonDeep valley with STEEP, NEAR-VERTICAL sides. Grand Canyon (USA).
WaterfallRiver falls over a hard rock ledge. Victoria Falls, Jog Falls.
MeanderSinuous bend in river. Mature stage — river erodes OUTER bank, deposits on INNER bank.
Ox-bow LakeMeander loop CUT OFF from main river. Crescent-shaped lake.
PotholeCircular depressions in rocky river bed — pebbles SWIRLED by water drill holes.

Depositional Landforms

LandformDescription
FloodplainFlat land on either side of river — built by DEPOSITS during floods. Fertile.
Natural LeveeRaised banks along river — built by deposition during floods.
DeltaFan-shaped deposit at river MOUTH. Nile Delta, Ganga-Brahmaputra Delta (SUNDARBANS — largest).
Alluvial FanFan-shaped deposit where river leaves mountains and enters PLAIN. Piedmont region.

3. Groundwater (Karst Topography)

Where?

  • Regions with LIMESTONE or DOLOMITE bedrock
  • Water DISSOLVES limestone → CAVES, SINKHOLES, and UNDERGROUND DRAINAGE

Erosional Landforms

  • Sinkhole: Collapse of surface into an underground cavity
  • Cave/Cavern: Underground chamber — water dissolves limestone over thousands of years
  • Stalactites: Icicle-shaped deposits hanging from CAVE CEILING (drip downward)
  • Stalagmites: Cone-shaped deposits rising from CAVE FLOOR (drip upward onto floor)
  • When stalactite and stalagmite meet: PILLAR

4. Glaciers (Glacial Landforms)

Erosional Landforms

LandformDescription
Cirque (Corrie)Bowl-shaped hollow at head of glacier. Tarn = lake in a cirque.
U-shaped ValleyGlacier WIDENS and DEEPENS valley. Cross-section = U (unlike river's V).
Hanging ValleyTributary valley left HIGH ABOVE main glacial valley. Waterfalls from it.
FjordU-shaped glacial valley FLOODED by the sea (coastal). Norway, New Zealand.

Depositional Landforms

LandformDescription
MoraineDebris carried and DEPOSITED by glacier. Terminal (end), lateral (side), ground, medial.
DrumlinSmooth, elongated hill of glacial till — 'inverted spoon' shape.
EskerLong, winding ridge of sand and gravel — deposited by STREAMS under the ice.

5. Wind (Aeolian Landforms)

Where? ARID and SEMI-ARID regions (deserts)

Erosional Landforms

  • Mushroom Rock / Pedestal Rock: Wind erodes LOWER portion more (sand blasting near ground). Rock narrows at base.
  • Yardang: Streamlined ridges carved by wind abrasion
  • Deflation Hollow: Wind removes loose material → BLOWOUT / depression

Depositional Landforms

LandformDescription
Sand DuneMound or ridge of wind-deposited sand. Barchans (crescent-shaped, tips downwind), Seif (longitudinal).
LoessFine wind-blown silt deposited over VAST areas. Loess Plateau, China — hundreds of metres thick. Very fertile.

6. Sea Waves (Coastal Landforms)

Erosional Landforms

  • Sea Cliff: Steep, retreating coastal slope — wave-cut at base
  • Sea Cave: Waves attack weak zones → cave
  • Sea Arch: Cave erodes THROUGH headland → arch
  • Sea Stack: Arch collapses → isolated pillar of rock in the sea (e.g., Twelve Apostles, Australia)

Depositional Landforms

  • Beach: Sand, pebbles deposited between low and high tide
  • Sand Bar: Ridge of sand deposited offshore, parallel to coast
  • Spit: Sand bar attached to land at one end, extending into sea
  • Lagoon: Shallow water body separated from sea by a sand bar/spit (Chilika Lake)

7. The Cycle of Erosion — Youth, Mature, Old (W.M. Davis)

StageCharacteristicsLandforms
YouthSteep slopes, rivers CUT DOWN (vertical erosion), V-shaped valleysGorges, waterfalls, rapids
MatureModerate relief, rivers CUT SIDEWAYS (lateral erosion), valleys widenMeanders, floodplains
OldLow relief, rivers SLOW, deposition DOMINATESOx-bow lakes, deltas, peneplain (nearly flat)

8. Exam Focus

  1. Fluvial landforms (erosional + depositional) — MUST KNOW thoroughly
  2. Glacial landforms — U-shaped valley, moraine, fjord
  3. Karst landforms — stalactite vs stalagmite
  4. Aeolian — sand dune types, mushroom rock
  5. Coastal — sea cliff → cave → arch → stack sequence
  6. Cycle of erosion stages

9. Common Mistakes

  1. Stalactite vs stalagmite confused — StalaCTITE = comes from the CEILING (hangs TIGHT). StalaGMITE = on the GROUND (might reach the ceiling). Mnemonic: T for top, G for ground.
  2. Delta and alluvial fan are the same — Delta forms where river ENTERS A STANDING WATER BODY (sea/lake). Alluvial fan forms where river LEAVES MOUNTAINS and enters a PLAIN. Different settings.

10. Conclusion

Every landform is a SIGNATURE — of water, wind, ice, or waves:

  • FLUVIAL: V-valleys → meanders → ox-bow lakes → deltas
  • GLACIAL: U-valleys, cirques, moraines, fjords
  • AEOLIAN: Mushroom rocks, sand dunes, loess
  • COASTAL: Cliffs → caves → arches → stacks
  • CYCLE: Youth (upland) → Mature (valley widening) → Old (lowland, depositional)

The Grand Canyon is 6 million years of the Colorado River doing what rivers do. Landforms are processes with patience.

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

River Development Stages
Youth (mountains: V-valley, gorge, waterfall) → Maturity (plains: meander, floodplain, oxbow lake) → Old Age (coast: delta, braided channel)
Each stage reflects the river's energy balance: young = high energy (erosion dominant); old = low energy (deposition dominant)
Meander Formation
Erosion on outer bank (concave, faster current) + Deposition on inner bank (convex, slower current) = asymmetric channel → increases curvature → meander
Outer bank undercut = river cliff. Inner bank deposition = point bar. Over time, meander neck narrows until cut-off → ox-bow lake
Glacial Landform Summary
Erosional: Cirque (armchair hollow) → Arête (knife-edge ridge between 2 cirques) → Horn/Pyramidal Peak (3+ cirques meeting, e.g. Matterhorn) + U-valley + Hanging valley
Depositional: Till (unsorted) → Moraines (terminal/lateral/medial/ground) + Drumlins (streamlined hills) + Eskers (sinuous ridges from subglacial streams)
Wind Depositional Landforms
Barchan: crescent-shaped dune, horns point downwind | Seif: longitudinal dune parallel to wind | Loess: fine dust deposited far from source
Barchans = sparse vegetation. Seifs = persistent wind. Loess (loss deposits in Gangetic Plain) = highly fertile, yellow-brown fine silt — key to Chinese and Indian Plains fertility
Karst Process
CO₂ + H₂O → H₂CO₃ (carbonic acid) + CaCO₃ (limestone) → Ca(HCO₃)₂ (soluble) → removed in solution
Creates: sinkholes (collapse of cavern roof), caves (Meghalaya's Mawsmai), stalactites (hanging from cave roof), stalagmites (growing from cave floor)
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Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
Saying ox-bow lakes form because rivers change course randomly
Ox-bow lakes form through a specific sequence: meander loop neck narrows → river cuts across neck during flood → water flows straight → old loop cut off → stagnant water = ox-bow lake. The shape (like an ox-bow yoke) helps remember it. In India: ox-bow lakes of the Ganga in Bihar (locally called 'jheel').
WATCH OUT
Confusing stalactites and stalagmites
Stalactites hang from the Ceiling (C = Ceiling). Stalagmites Grow from the Ground (G = Ground). Both are calcium carbonate deposited as water evaporates. They grow toward each other; when they meet, they form a pillar/column.
WATCH OUT
Saying deltas form at ALL river mouths
Deltas form when: (i) river carries large sediment load; (ii) sea is shallow (continental shelf); (iii) tidal energy is LOW (doesn't sweep sediment away). Strong tides = estuary, not delta. Example: Ganga-Brahmaputra delta forms (low tidal energy, high sediment); Thames River forms an estuary (strong tidal energy).
WATCH OUT
Thinking all coastal cliffs are formed the same way
Cliffs form by wave undercutting (wave cuts notch at base → overhang collapses). Further erosion creates: Cave → Arch (tunnel through headland) → Stack (isolated pillar when arch collapses) → Stump (stack eroded to sea level). This sequence is a classic 4-mark question.

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1EASY· River Landforms
Explain the formation of an ox-bow lake from a meander. Include: (a) the process that creates a meander, (b) how the neck narrows, and (c) how the ox-bow lake is finally isolated.
Show solution
(a) **Meander formation**: Water flows faster on the outer bank of a river bend (longer path, same volume = higher velocity). Faster water erodes the outer bank (river cliff). On the inner bank, slower water deposits material (point bar). This makes the bend more pronounced — a meander loop. (b) **Neck narrowing**: As erosion continues on both outer banks of adjacent meander loops, the narrow land between them (the neck) gets progressively thinner. During floods, higher water levels cover the neck temporarily. (c) **Ox-bow lake formation**: During a major flood, the river takes the shorter, straight path across the neck — cutting off the old meander loop. The new straight channel carries the river; the old loop's ends gradually silt up. The isolated loop becomes an ox-bow lake — shaped like an ox's neck yoke. In India, ox-bow lakes in the Ganga floodplain of Bihar are called 'jheel' and are important fish habitats.
Q2MEDIUM· Glacial Landforms
Distinguish between a V-shaped valley and a U-shaped valley. What agent formed each? For each type of valley, describe TWO associated landforms found nearby.
Show solution
**V-shaped valley (Fluvial)**: - Agent: River (fluvial erosion) - Formation: River flowing downslope cuts vertically into bedrock. Vertical erosion > lateral erosion in mountain stage. Side slopes erode by mass movement and slope wash, creating the V-shape. - Profile: Narrow, steep-sided, V in cross-section. River occupies full valley floor. - Associated landforms: (i) **Waterfall** — river drops over resistant rock ledge; (ii) **Gorge** — very steep, narrow V-valley cut through hard rock (e.g., Beas Kund gorge in Himachal). **U-shaped valley (Glacial)**: - Agent: Glacier (glacial erosion — plucking + abrasion) - Formation: Glacier fills a pre-existing river valley, erodes all three surfaces (floor + two walls) equally by abrasion and plucking. Creates characteristic flat floor + steep, straight sides = U-shape. - Profile: Wide, flat-floored, steep-walled. Glacier fills entire valley; after glacial retreat, a ribbon lake or river occupies the floor. - Associated landforms: (i) **Hanging valley** — a smaller tributary glacier occupied a higher valley; when glaciers retreat, the tributary valley hangs above the main floor, creating a waterfall (Roopkund area, Uttarakhand); (ii) **Moraines** — unsorted glacial debris deposited along the valley sides (lateral moraine) and at the glacier's snout (terminal moraine).
Q3HARD· Coastal Landforms
Explain the sequence of coastal erosional landforms from a wave-cut cliff to a stump. Draw a labelled sketch showing this sequence. What determines how quickly this sequence progresses?
Show solution
**Coastal Erosion Sequence**: 1. **Wave-cut notch**: Waves attack the base of a coastal cliff, excavating a notch. Process: hydraulic action (water pressure in cracks) + corrasion (pebbles used as cutting tools) + solution (chemical dissolution of limestone cliffs). 2. **Cliff**: The overhanging rock above the notch collapses. The exposed, near-vertical face = wave-cut cliff. The flat platform cut by waves at the cliff base = wave-cut platform. 3. **Cave**: Weakness zones (joints, fault lines) in the cliff face are preferentially attacked by waves, forming a cave — deeper than wide, usually at sea level. 4. **Arch**: When caves form on BOTH sides of a headland and break through, the roof remains → natural arch. The sea passes UNDER the arch. 5. **Stack**: The arch roof collapses from wave erosion and weathering. The outer portion of the headland is now isolated as a column = sea stack. Example: Old Man of Hoy (Scotland); similar features on India's Konkan coast. 6. **Stump**: The isolated stack continues to be eroded at its base by waves. It collapses to sea level or just below = stump (visible only at low tide). **[Sketch description: horizontal sea on left → stack (isolated column) → arch (tunnel with rock above) → cave (hollow in cliff face) → notch at base → cliff with hatching → wave-cut platform at sea level]** **Factors affecting rate**: (i) Rock hardness: soft rock (sandstone, chalk) erodes in decades; hard rock (granite, basalt) takes millennia. (ii) Wave energy: exposed coasts facing prevailing winds (India's west coast during SW monsoon) erode faster. (iii) Joint/fault density: heavily fractured rock gives waves more attack points. (iv) Sea level change: rising sea brings waves to higher cliff faces, accelerating erosion.

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • River stages: Youth (V-valley, gorge, waterfall) → Maturity (meander, floodplain, point bar, oxbow lake) → Old Age (delta, braided channel, levee)
  • Meander: erosion on outer bank (river cliff) + deposition on inner bank (point bar) → neck narrows → cutoff during flood → ox-bow lake
  • Glacial erosional: Cirque (armchair hollow) → Arête (ridge) → Horn (pyramidal peak, 3+ cirques). Depositional: lateral/medial/terminal/ground moraines, drumlins, eskers
  • Wind erosional: deflation hollows, mushroom/pedestal rocks, inselbergs. Depositional: Barchan (crescent, horns downwind), seif (longitudinal), loess (far-transported fine silt)
  • Coastal erosion sequence: notch → cliff → cave → arch → stack → stump
  • Karst: CO₂+H₂O dissolves limestone → sinkholes, dolines, caverns, stalactites (ceiling), stalagmites (ground), pillars

CBSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 5-8 marks

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
Short Answer (SA)3-51-2Distinguish V-valley vs U-valley; explain meander → ox-bow lake; describe karst features; coastal erosion sequence
Long Answer with Sketch (LA)51Draw and label river landforms (upper/middle/lower course); or glacial erosional and depositional features; or coastal erosion sequence with sketch
Prep strategy
  • Draw and label diagrams for ALL major landform types — river (V-valley, meander, delta), glacial (cirque-arête-horn, U-valley), coastal (cliff-arch-stack). Geography examiners give 1 extra mark for a good labelled sketch. Practice sketching these from memory.
  • River landform sequences are guaranteed questions. Memorise: Youth (V-valley, gorge, waterfall) → Maturity (meander, floodplain, oxbow lake) → Old Age (delta, braided). Each stage has 2-3 landforms to associate.
  • Stalactite vs stalagmite is a perennial 1-mark question. Never get it wrong: Stalactites hang from the Ceiling (c); Stalagmites grow from the Ground (g).

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

River Engineering and Flood Management

Understanding meanders explains why straightening rivers for navigation (as done on many US and European rivers) backfires — the river re-meanders or cuts deeper, causing floods. The Ganga Action Plan's embankment construction ignored meander dynamics, causing levee breaches. Modern flood management works WITH natural river processes, not against them.

Tourism and Landform Recognition

India's most visited natural sites are landforms from this chapter: Valley of Flowers (glacial U-valley, Uttarakhand), Dudhsagar Falls (waterfall on Goa-Karnataka border), Living Bridges of Meghalaya (karst landscape), Rann of Kutch (aeolian/coastal). Identifying landform types from photographs is a CBSE exam skill — and a travel literacy skill.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. For any 'explain formation' question: always give the sequence — what agent? → what process? → what landform results? → what associated features? This 4-step structure ensures you don't miss marks
  2. Barchan vs seif dune questions: Barchan = crescent, sparse vegetation, variable wind. Seif = longitudinal, constant wind direction. If asked to 'identify from a description,' barchan always has the distinctive crescent shape with horns pointing downwind
  3. Delta formation conditions (3 to memorise): high sediment load + shallow sea + low tidal energy. If any examiner gives a scenario 'river X flows into a shallow, calm sea with lots of suspended silt' — answer is DELTA

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Study the concept of the Hjulström Curve — it shows the minimum water velocity needed to erode, transport, or deposit particles of different sizes. It explains why fine clay is harder to erode than sand (cohesion), and why coarse gravel requires very fast currents. This underpins ALL fluvial geomorphology
  • Research proglacial lakes and glacial lake outburst floods (GLOFs) in the context of climate change — as glaciers retreat, the ice dams holding meltwater lakes weaken. Over 5,000 glacial lakes exist in the Indian Himalayas; NDMA has identified 188 as high-risk. This is applied geomorphology with life-and-death implications

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

CBSE Class 11 BoardHigh
CUET GeographyHigh
UPSC Prelims + Mains (GS-1: Physical Geography)Very High

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

Delta vs estuary depends on TIDAL ENERGY vs SEDIMENT SUPPLY. East coast rivers (Ganga, Godavari, Krishna, Cauvery) flow into the Bay of Bengal, which has LOW tidal range — tides don't sweep sediment away, so rivers build deltas. West coast rivers flow into the Arabian Sea, which has HIGHER tidal range — tidal energy is strong enough to keep river mouths open and flush sediment, creating estuaries. Additionally, west coast rivers are SHORT and STEEP (Western Ghats near coast), carrying less total sediment.

Both are glacial depositional landforms. Moraine: any glacial debris deposited in ridges — terminal moraine marks the glacier's maximum advance (end); lateral moraine lines the sides; medial moraine forms when two glaciers merge. Drumlins: oval, streamlined hills of till shaped by active ice flow. They point in the direction of ice movement (blunt end upstream, tapered end downstream). Unlike moraines, drumlins are smoothed and shaped while UNDER the glacier, not deposited at its margins.
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Last reviewed on 27 May 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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