Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Chapter 5: Coastal change and conflict
- Geology of coasts
- Soft rock coasts
- clay - easily eroded by by the sea
- Holderness, Yorkshire
- cliffs
- May be high but less rugged and steep than hard rock coasts
- piles of mud + clay on cliff face
- at foot of cliff - few rocks, some sand + mud
- sea often brown
- Hard rock coasts
- granite - reistant to erosion
- Land's End, Cornwall
- cliffs
- high, steep + rugged
- bare cliff face
- some rocks + boulders at foot
- erosion features e.g. caves, arches, stacks
- erosion
- Hydraulic action
- Waves hitting rock foces air into cracks. Trapped air,
released quickly, breaks up the rock
- Abrasion
- Waves pick up stones and hurl
them against the cliff which wears
away the rock
- Attrition
- Pebbles carried by waves - rounder + smaller as they
collide with eachother
- Coastal landforms
- At a headland
- Cave - when waves erode weakness in the rock e.g. joint/fault
- Arch - when 2 caves erode back from either side of a headland and meet in the middle
- Stack - when the arch roof weathers and arch collapses
- Stump - stack eroded by wind and water
- wave- cut platform
- 1. waves cause undercutting at base of slope
- 2. forms a notch that gradually gets bigger
- 3. rock above loses support and collapses
- 4. debris gradually washed away by waves
- process repeats - cliff slowly retreats backwards and becomes steeper
- e.g. seven sisters, east sussex
- Coasts
- concordant coast - alternating hard and soft rocks occur parallel to
coast and are eroded at different rates
- formation of lulworth cove
- 1. waves slowly cut through weakness in resistant band of limestone - forms a small narrow entrance to
cove
- 2. cove widens- soft clay eroded quickly
- 3. a band of chalk behind the clay is more resistant so erosion is slower
- Discordant coast - alternating hard and soft rock occur
at right angles to coast and are eroded at different rates
- hard rock stands out as headlands and soft rocks form bays
- waves
- constructive
- in calm conditions waves are
- small, weak, low frequency
- don't break with much force
- add sand/ sediment to coastline by deposition
- swash is greater than backwash so sediment is pushed up beach
- long wavelength
- shallow gradient
- strong swash
- weak backwash
- destructive
- break with lots of force + energy
- have the power to carry out erosion of beaches + rocks
- high frequency
- backwash is greater than swash so sediemnt taken away from beach into sea
- steep gradient
- tall waves
- short wavelength
- weak swash
- strong backwash
- Longshore drift
- 1. waves approach the coast at an angle
- 2. Swash pushes sand and gravel up beach at same angle
- 3. Backwash carries sand and gravel back down beach at 90 degrees under force of gravity
- 4. sand + gravel move along beach in a zigzag fashion
- 5. sand is lighter so moves up the beach further than gravel or pebbles
- Formation
- spit
- longshore drift carrys beach sediment beyond a bend in coastline
- leading to an extention of the beach into the open water
- end of spit becomes curved when exposed to srong winds + waves
- deposition happens in the sheltered water behind then spit, and becomes a salt marsh
- definition: material deposited by the sea which grows across a bay/river mouth
- Bar
- if longshore drift continues along the spit
- over time, the sand + pebble accumulation grows larger and builds
builds across an estuary to form a bar / join up with coastline on the other side
- bar cuts off rivers from the sea so water builds up behind bar - forms a freshwater
lake/ lagoon - e.g. slapton Ley, devon
- Weathering
- Mechanical
- salt cystal growth (left from evaporated seawater) causes stress in rock -
breaks into tiny fragments
- Chemical
- acid rain - reacts with weak minerals - dissloves + rock decays
- Biological
- roots of vegetation - grow in rock cracks + slit rock apart
- Mass movement
- rock fall
- fragments of weathered rock from a cliff face fall under gravity + collect at base
- Slumping
- bottom of cliff eroded by waves
- slope becomes steeper and cliff can slide downwards in a rotational manner
- triggered by saturation due to rain
- this lubricates the rock and makes it heavier
- climate change on marine erosion + deposition
- uk - rising sea levels as warmer temps. from global warming melt glaciers ans ice sheets
- changing storm patterns - stronger + less predictable
- impacts on marine erosion
- stronger storms- bigger wave energy - more erosion
- abandoned cliffs - come under new attack by waves as sea level rises
- soft clay coasts - faster retreat
- impact on marine depositional features
- rising sea levels - beaches + bars at risk of submergence and erosion
- e.g. Studland beach, Dorset - 1 million tourist p.a (eroded by 2-3m a year)
- facilities relocate + beach replenished
- extreme weather becomes more common - violent storms (+hurricanes)
- destroy beaches/ spits
- rising sea temp. - more storm energy - spits breached creating large gaps
- e.g. 2004 hurricane charley - coast of florida - north captiva spit breached - 450m gap due to
high tides + v. strong winds
- climate change
- Sea level rise - 0.3m prediction by 2100
- loy-lying areas at risk e.g bangladesh + maldives
- Thames estuary flooding - 12X more frequent by 2100
- TTB - holds back v.high tides
- 'Thames estuary 2010' new project to build
new flood walls along river
- Storms at sea
- increase height of waves - cause flooding
- the environment agency manages + forecasts
- How fast a coast retreats depend on ...
- Rock type - hard rocks erode slower that soft
- Number of faults + joints - with more the rocks erode faster
- Fetch - if wind blows over a wide area of sea (fetch), the waves are stronger + will have a greater impact on cliffs
- cliff exposure - ones exposed to strong winds + weather will erode quicker than ones sheltered
- Storms - ones exposed to frequent storms erode quicker
- Sea defences - those protected have a slow retreat
- Cliff erosion effects
- Houses destroyes
- Farmland lost
- loss of income
- Hotels + caravan parks abandoned
- loss of roads