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alluvium
(redirected from Alluvial deposits)

   Also found in: Financial, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.

alluvium

Sediments laid down by streams and rivers. The most common constituents are clay, silt, and gravel. The loose, unconsolidated material forms features such as river terraces, flood plains, and deltas.

Alluvium is deposited along the river channel where the water's velocity is too low to transport the river's load – for example, on the inside bend of a meander.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
From radiocarbon dates of a few alluvial deposits (sediments deposited by streams or rivers) and analyses of soils along the southeastern end of the fault, Madole brackets the time of last movement between 500 and 2,000 years ago.
Pan samples of alluvial deposits at Dime Creek revealed high-grade placer gold and platinum concentrations, as well, as uranium at the head of Quartz Creek.
The alluvial deposits on Dime Creek are composed of mostly volcanic andesite and basalt sand and gravel with occasional cobbles of intrusive olivine dunite.
 
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