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Coastal Erosion Processes:

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Coastal Erosion Processes: Waves of Oscillation and Waves of Translation: Wind-generated waves may originate thousands of kilometers out at sea. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Coastal Erosion Processes:


1
Coastal Erosion Processes
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Waves of Oscillation andWaves of Translation
  • Wind-generated waves may originate thousands of
    kilometers out at sea. Out in the deep open
    ocean, waves usually start out small and choppy.
    If the wind is strong and lasts long enough, the
    wave pattern becomes more organized. Storm-driven
    waves often travel towards the distant shore as
    low, rounded swells.

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  • As swells approach the shallow coastline they
    begin to touch bottom. Water drags against the
    sea bottom, slowing its forward movement. While
    the wave slows, water piles up, building higher
    and higher waves as the bottom shallows.
  • Eventually the wave reaches a critical point when
    the steep advancing edge collapses. Breaking
    waves disintegrate into turbulent sheets of water
    called swash that carry sand and gravel up onto
    the beach.

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Longshore Drift
  • Longshore drift is the movement of material along
    the shore by wave action.
  • Longshore drift happens when waves moves towards
    the coast at an angle. The swash (waves moving up
    the beach) carries material up and along the
    beach. The backwash carries material back down
    the beach at right angles. This is the result of
    gravity. This process slowly moves material along
    the beach.

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  • Longshore drift provides a link between erosion
    and deposition. Material in one place is eroded,
    transported then deposited elsewhere

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Longshore Drift
                                                  
      
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Longshore drift animation
http//www.bbc.co.uk/schools/gcsebitesize/geograph
y/coasts/coastaldepositionrev2.shtml
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Piers can block longhore drift
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Groynes
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Use of Groynes
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Wave Refraction
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Erosion of a headland
  • A headland is an area of hard rock which sticks
    out into the sea. Headlands form in areas of
    alternating hard and soft rock. Where the soft
    rock erodes bays are formed either side of the
    headland. As the headland becomes more exposed to
    the wind and waves the rate of its erosion
    increases. When headlands erode they create
    distinct features such as caves, arches, stacks
    and stumps.

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Types of Erosion
  • Corrasion/abrasion is when waves pick up beach
    material (e.g. pebbles) and hurl them at the base
    of a cliff.
  • When waves hit the base of a cliff air is
    compressed into cracks. when the wave retreats
    the air rushes out of the gap. Often this causes
    cliff matrial to break away. This process is
    known as hydraulic action.

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Types of Erosion
  • Attrition is when waves cause rocks and pebbles
    to bump into each other and break up.
  • Corrosion/solution is when certain types of cliff
    erode as a result of weak acids in the sea.

18
Cliff Recession
  • Erosion is greatest when waves break at the foot
    of a cliff. This causes erosion at the base of
    the cliff. This creates a wave-cut notch in the
    base of the cliff. As the notch increases in size
    the weight of the cliffs above become too much
    and the cliff collapses. This material will
    provide temporary protection for the cliff
    behind. However, once it has been removed by the
    sea this process will occur again. Where cliffs
    are made of more resistant material, wave cut
    platforms will be created.

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Wave cut terrace
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Cave, Tunnel, Arch, StackStage 1 Waves attack
a weakness in the headland.
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Stage 2 a cave is formed
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Stage 3 Eventually the cave erodes through the
headland to form an arch.
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Stage 4 The roof of the arch collapses leaving
a column of rock called a stack.
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Animated Progression
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Diagram progression
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Arch
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Stack
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Twelve Apostles Australia
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Basaltic Stacks
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Needles
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Erosion of Jump-off Joe Stack
1890
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1910
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1920
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1970
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1990
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A CAVE AND TUNNEL B ARCH C STACK
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Tombolo a sand bar joining a headland and a stack
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Spit
  • Longshore drift moves material along a coastline.
    Where there is an obstruction or the power of the
    waves is reduced the material is deposited. Where
    rivers or estuaries meet the sea deposition often
    occurs. The sediment which is deposited usually
    builds up over the years to form a long ridge of
    material (usually sand or shingle). Such a ridge
    is called a spit.

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Spit formation
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Spurn Head Spit
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Spit
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BlowholesA weakness or crack in the cliff can
be enlarged by wave erosion, forming a cave. If
part of the roof of the cave falls in this can
form a blow-hole. Waves rushing into the cave
may then splash up the blow-hole inland.
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Blowhole
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Coastal Submergence
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Coastal Emergence
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