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coasts
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holderness coast
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Anika
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Cards (50)
What is the annual erosion rate of the Holderness coast?
About
1 meter
per year
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What are the consequences of erosion on the Holderness coast?
Land loss
,
property damage
, and environmental impacts
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What percentage of gas does the Easington gas terminal supply?
25%
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What types of coastal management strategies are used on the Holderness coast?
A mix of
hard
and
soft
engineering
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What are the hard engineering strategies used in Holderness coastal management?
Sea walls
Groynes
Rock armour
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What are the soft engineering strategies used in Holderness coastal management?
Beach nourishment
Cliff drainage
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What conflicts can arise from coastal management strategies?
Increased
erosion in some areas
Disputes
over sea defense locations
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What is the impact of coastal erosion on the environment and settlements?
Loss of land
Damage to
properties
Threats to local
ecosystems
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What is the historical significance of land loss on the Holderness coast?
3 miles
of land lost since
Roman
times
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What are the effects of strong winds and destructive waves on coastal erosion?
Accelerate
erosion rates
Contribute to
land loss
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How does the Holderness coast manage its coastal erosion issues?
Combination of
hard and soft engineering
Specific strategies at different locations
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What is the focus of episode eight of the coastal landscapes series?
Holderness
and
coastal erosion
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Why is the Holderness coast significant in terms of erosion?
It has the
fastest
eroding
coastline
in
Europe
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How much coastline does Holderness lose on average each year?
Nearly
two meters
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How much has the Holderness coast retreated since Roman times?
By
four kilometers
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How many villages have been lost to the sea in Holderness?
At least
29
villages
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What are the three main reasons for the coastline retreating in Holderness?
Geology
, fetch, and
longshore drift
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What type of material primarily composes the Holderness coast?
Boulder clay
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What is boulder clay also known as?
Glacial till
or
drift
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Why is boulder clay structurally weak?
It has little resistance to
erosion
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What height do the cliffs at Holderness typically reach?
Between
5
and
20
meters
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What geological feature has been created at Flamborough Head?
A
headland
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What has created features such as cliffs, arches, and stacks along Holderness?
Erosion along
fault lines
and
bedding planes
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What does fetch refer to in coastal erosion?
The distance
waves
have traveled
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How far is Holderness exposed to winds and waves from the northeast?
About
500
to
800
kilometers
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What is the Atlantic fetch compared to the fetch affecting Holderness?
5,000 kilometers
or more
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What effect do low-pressure weather systems have on the sea levels?
They
raise
sea
levels
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How do waves reach the cliffs at Holderness?
Without being weakened by
friction
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What type of particles does boulder clay erode to produce?
Mainly
clay particles
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Why do the beaches at Holderness offer little protection against wave energy?
They are
narrow
and lack
sand
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What is the main form of mass movement affecting the boulder cliffs at Holderness?
Slumping
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What causes the cracks in the boulder clay cliffs?
Expansion
and
shrinkage
from wetting and drying
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What happens to the slumped material at the cliff base?
It is removed by the
sea
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What is terminal groin syndrome?
It affects beach material flow due to
defenses
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When was the first sea wall built in Hornsea?
In
1870
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How long did the first sea wall last?
Just
six years
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What was built in 1906 in Hornsea?
A
stronger sea wall
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What is the purpose of the T-shaped rock armor at Hornsea?
To allow
beach sediment to accumulate
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What has happened to the cliffs at Mappleton due to coastal defenses?
They are exposed to
wave attack
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What economic impact has coastal erosion had on Margaret Fincham?
She lost
100
chalets to the sea
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