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Geography - PHYSICAL
geography - coasts
booklet one
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Isabel M
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Cards (20)
systems approach
: - help us understand
physical
and human world around us
- understand how
energy
is transferred between system
components
and how they change
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coastal zones
: -
dynamic
environments with distinctive landscapes formed by the interaction of
wind
,
marine
and
terrestrial
processes
- important to
human
race,
half
of
world's
population live on
coastal plains
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system
: set of
interrelated
components working together towards a process
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flow
/
transfer
:
linkage
between one store to another, involves movement of
energy
/
mass
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input
addition
of matter / energy into a system
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output
final product
, the thing that's been created
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store / component: where
energy
/
mass
is
stored
/ transformed
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coastal zones
-
littoral zone
: - this is the boundary between land and sea
- very
dynamic
zone meaning its constantly changing
- different zones where specific conditions prevail, depend on factors eg. tides, waves,
depth
of sea and all relate to each other
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Backshore zone
: - above
high tide
level
- only affected by waves during
exceptionally
high tides and
major
storms
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Foreshore zone
: - between the
high water mark
(hwm) and
low water mark
(lwm)
- most important zone for marine processes in times that aren't influenced by storms
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Inshore zone
: - between
lwm
and points where waves cease to have influence on the land beneath them
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offshore zone
: - beyond points where waves cease impact upon
seabed
- activity is limited to deposition of sediments
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nearshore zone
: - area extending seaward from
hwm
to where waves break
- includes
swash zone
,
surf zone
and
breaker zone
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open system
: the
coast
is an open system as it receives inputs and outputs
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inputs:
marine
:
waves, tides,
storm surges
atmospheric
:
weather/climate,
climate change
, solar energy
land
:
rock type
/ structure, tectonic activity
people:
human activity,
coastal management
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processes: -
weathering
-
mass movement
- erosion
-
transport
- deposition
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outputs: -
erosional
landforms
-
depositional
landforms
- different types of
coast
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positive feedback
: - effects
amplified
and multiplied by subsequent / secondary effects
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negative feedback
: -
effects
nullified (cancelled out) by subsequent / secondary effects
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dynamic equilibrium
: - when there's a balance between
inputs
and
outputs
, this means that the stores stay the same
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