Cards (20)

  • marine processes
    - occur at / below water line
    - base of cliff
  • erosion
    - wearing away and removal of material
    TYPES:
    - hydraulic action
    - wave quarrying
    - abrasion / corrasion
    - attrition
  • hydraulic action
    - impact on rocks of the sheer force of water itself
    - exert enormous pressure on rock surface, weakening it
    - sometimes referred to as wave pounding
  • wave quarrying
    - breaking wave traps air as hits cliff face
    - force of water compresses air into any gap in rock face
    - create enormous pressure within fissure or joint
    - as water pulls back, explosive effect of air under pressure of air being released
  • abrasion / corrasion
    - material sea picks up wears away rock faces
    - sand, shingle and boulders hurled against a cliff line will do enormous damage
    - also apparent on inter-tidal rock platforms where sediment is drawn back and forth grinding at platform
  • attrition
    - rocks in sea which carry out abrasion are slowly worn down into smaller and more rounded pieces
  • solution (corrosion)

    - not really a process of erosion
    - water dissolves rock, mostly chalk or limestone
  • factors that lead to marine erosion
    - rock type (lithology)
    - rock structure, variation and dip
    - beach shape (steeper shelf = steeper waves)
    - subaerial processes
    - breaking point of wave
    - wave steepness
    - depth of sea, length of fetch
    - presence / absence of protective beach
    - human activity, eg coastal management
  • lithology
    - rock characteristics (permeability and resistance)
    - very resistant rocks are eroded less than weaker materials
  • dip
    angle at which rock strata lie
  • concordant coast
    - bands of diff rock run parallel to coast
    - results in distinctive landforms
    - slower erosion as more resistant layers act as barrier to erosion
  • discordant coast
    - bands of diff rock run at right angles to coast
    - headlands and bays usually form as rock resistance is varied
    - faster erosion as weaker rocks erode faster and wave energy is refracted on headland
  • transportation
    - processes move material from site where erosion took place to site of deposition
  • traction
    large stones and boulders rolled along
  • saltation
    small stones bounced along
  • solution
    chemicals dissolved in water
  • suspension
    very small particles of sand and silt are being carried
  • marine deposition takes place when ...
    - rapid coastal erosion providing an abundant supply of material
    - inputs exceed outputs
    - sheltered areas
    - low energy environments
    - where coast suddenly changes direction
  • aeolian deposition
    When sediment carried by wind is deposited
  • aeolian depositions take place when...
    - wind is a constant feature
    - large tidal range
    - sand sized sediment is most significant in terms of depositional features
    - sand may roll or slide under the wind (surface creep)
    - where wind is strong enough it may be lifted (saltation)
    - contributes to beaches and dunes