The gradual and imperceptible addition to land by alluvial deposits of soil through natural causes, such as shoreline movement caused by streams or rivers
The imperceptible and gradual addition to land by the slow action of water Heavy rain, river or ocean action would have this effect by either washing up sand or soil or by a permanent retreat of the high water mark The washing up of soil is often called avulsion although the latter term is but a variety of accretion
The gradual and imperceptible addition of land by alluvial deposits of soil through natural causes, such as shoreline movement caused by streams or rivers This added land upon a bank or stream, navigable or not, becomes the property of the riparian or littoral owner, and it also becomes subject to any existing mortgages
An increase in land area because of sediments deposited by flowing water, especially along shores If accretion keeps pace with sea level, then relative sea level rise has little impact on coastal wetlands If sea level rises faster than organic matter and mineral deposits can accumulate (or if sediments are trapped behind dams) coastal land can be inundated, especially during spring tides when tides are highest, for example at full moon
The gradual addition to the shore or bank of a waterway The land generally becomes the property of the owner of the shore or bank, except where statutes specify otherwise
The slow addition to land by deposition of water-borne sediment An increase in land along the shores of a body of water, as by Alluvial deposit Accretion and alluvion are often used synonymously
{i} expansion or increase due to gradual build-up or additions; growth, increase in size; added part, addition; growing together or joining of separate parts
An accretion is an addition to something, usually one that has been added over a period of time. The script has been gathering editorial accretions for years
The adhering of property to something else, by which the owner of one thing becomes possessed of a right to another; generally, gain of land by the washing up of sand or sail from the sea or a river, or by a gradual recession of the water from the usual watermark
Accretion is the process of new layers or parts being added to something so that it increases in size. A coral reef is built by the accretion of tiny, identical organisms
(law) an increase in a beneficiary's share in an estate (as when a co-beneficiary dies or fails to meet some condition or rejects the inheritance) an increase by natural growth or addition (geology) an increase in land resulting from alluvial deposits or water-borne sediment (biology) growth by addition as by the adhesion of parts or particles (astronomy) the formation of a celestial object by the effect of gravity pulling together surrounding objects and gases something contributing to growth or increase; "he scraped away the accretions of paint"; "the central city surrounded by recent accretions