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Geography - PHYSICAL
geography - coasts
booklet two
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Created by
Isabel M
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Cards (17)
what causes
wind
? -
movement of air
from one place to another, from
high to low pressure
- in
UK
, prevailing wind is from the
SW
, these blow over the
Atlantic
and have potential to transfer great deal of energy to the waves that approach UK
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how can
waves
be created? - mainly from
wind
- can be generated by
tectonic activity
or underwater landslides, creating a
tsunami
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waves
: - created by transfer of energy from
wind
blowing over surface of the sea
- as strength of wind increases, so does the
frictional drag
and size of wave
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factors affecting
wave energy
: -
strength
of wind
- duration of wind ~ longer wind blows, more powerful wave becomes
-
fetch
~ distance of open water over which the wind blows
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longest fetch in
UK
: - extends over
3000km
across
Atlantic Ocean
to
Brazil
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characteristics of a
wave
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crest
top of the wave
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wavelength
distance
between two crests
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wave height
difference between the
crest
and
trough
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trough
bottom of the wave
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wave period
time between
each
wave
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why do
waves
break? - waves move energy (not water) far
distances
-
kinetic energy
moves THROUGH the water
- the water is moving but only in a circular motion
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what happens when
waves
reach the
coast
? - sea becomes shallower when waves hit the coast, meaning there's more
friction
in water, slowing them down
- creates smaller waves
- when there's less friction on sea bed, waves are larger as
orbital motion
isn't disrupted as much
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constructive waves
: - break gently with
low frequencies
(6 - 8 a min)
- material deposited along coast
- material moved up beach forming ridges (
berms
)
- form
spits
, sand bars and tombolos
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destructive waves
: - steeper
beach
- high proportion to length of wave
- erodes
coastline
- rapidly steepen when approaching beach, then plunge down
-
wave cut
platforms, bays,
headlands
, arches, stacks, stumps
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wave refraction
: overtime
headlands
are more eroded than bays. this is because:
- in bays, wave crests curve (diverge) to fill bay and wave height decreases
- at headlands, it becomes shallow and wave height increases
- the waves refract, concentrating their power on the headlands
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how does
wave refraction
demonstrate negative feedback? - the softer rock is
eroded
faster to form bays, leaving a
headland
- wave refraction is concentrated on the headland, eroding it faster
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