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  1. Las ondulitas, rizaduras o ripple-marks (es muy común el uso del término en inglés) son estructuras sedimentarias que se forman por la acción de una corriente de agua o viento sobre un sustrato de arena suelta. Las de mayor tamaño se denominan dunas, especialmente las de origen eólico.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ripple_marksRipple marks - Wikipedia

    In geology, ripple marks are sedimentary structures (i.e., bedforms of the lower flow regime) and indicate agitation by water ( current or waves) or directly by wind . Defining ripple cross-laminae and asymmetric ripples.

  3. Ripple mark, one of a series of small marine, lake, or riverine topographic features, consisting of repeating wavelike forms with symmetrical slopes, sharp peaks, and rounded troughs. Ripple marks are formed in sandy bottoms by oscillation waves, in which only the wave form advances rapidly, the.

  4. Ripples are known by several names: ripple marks, ripple cross-beds, or ripple cross laminations. The ridges or undulations in the bed are created as sediment grains pile up on top of the plane bed. With the exception of dunes, the scale of these beds is typically measured in centimeters.

  5. 1 de ene. de 2013 · Definition. Ripples, ripple marks, or ripple structures can be defined as small-scale, flow-transverse ridges of silt or sand produced by fluid shear at the boundary between moving water or air and an erodible sediment bed. Principal ripple types are current ripples, formed by unidirectional water flows, wave ripples, generated by ...

  6. 8 de may. de 2018 · Definition. Ripple marks have been defined in several ways: initially based upon morphology and metrics, and more recently on genesis. Merriam-Websters dictionary defines ripple marks as “a series of small ridges produced especially on sand by the action of wind, a current of water, or waves.”

  7. 1 de ene. de 2014 · 170 Accesses. Download reference work entry PDF. Ripple marks are generally depositional features (formed at a fluid/sediment interface), more or less regular and repetitive, and typically having a spacing greater than about 7 mm, up to a few meters. Most examples occur in coarse silt, sand, or fine gravel.