natural levee

natural levee
   A long, broad low ridge or embankment of sand and coarse silt, built by a stream on its flood plain and along both sides of its channel, especially in time of flood when water overflowing the normal banks is forced to deposit the coarsest part of its load. It has a gentle slope away from the river and toward the surrounding floodplain, and its highest elevation is closest to the river bank.
   GG

Glossary of landform and geologic terms. 2013.

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  • natural levee — a deposit of sand or mud built up along, and sloping away from, either side of the flood plain of a river or stream. Also called levee. * * * …   Universalium

  • natural levee — a deposit of sand or mud built up along, and sloping away from, either side of the flood plain of a river or stream. Also called levee …   Useful english dictionary

  • natural levee —    A river bank raised by the river’s own depositions [16] …   Lexicon of Cave and Karst Terminology

  • levee — levee1 /lev ee/, n., v., leveed, leveeing. n. 1. an embankment designed to prevent the flooding of a river. 2. Geol. See natural levee. 3. Agric. one of the small continuous ridges surrounding fields that are to be irrigated. 4. Hist. a landing… …   Universalium

  • levee —    An artificial or natural embankment built along the margin of a watercourse or an arm of the sea, to protect land from inundation or to confine streamflow to its channel.    Compare: artificial levee, natural levee.    GG …   Glossary of landform and geologic terms

  • Levee — For other uses, see Levee (disambiguation). The side of a levee in Sacramento, California A levee, levée, dike (or dyke), embankment, floodbank or stopbank is an elongated naturally occurring ridge or artificially constructed fill or wall, which… …   Wikipedia

  • Levee breach — A levee failure during the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 …   Wikipedia

  • levee — {{11}}levee (n.1) 1719, natural or artificial embankment to prevent overflow of a river, from New Orleans Fr. levée raising, lifting; embankment, from French, originally fem. pp. of lever to raise, from L. levare to raise (see LEVER (Cf. lever)) …   Etymology dictionary

  • levee — I lev•ee [[t]ˈlɛv i[/t]] n. 1) civ an embankment designed to prevent the flooding of a river 2) gel a natural deposit of sand or mud built up along the side of a river or stream 3) agr. one of the small continuous ridges surrounding fields that… …   From formal English to slang

  • Natural disaster — Not to be confused with environmental disaster. A natural disaster is the effect of a natural hazard (e.g., flood, tornado, hurricane, volcanic eruption, earthquake, heatwave, or landslide). It leads to financial, environmental or human losses.… …   Wikipedia

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