coastal environments are continuously being shaped and reshaped. These change due to the interaction of winds, waves, currents and terrestrial and marine sediments. The processes and landforms are created as a result of energy and sediment e.g. storms, tsunamis, landslides, coastal management
what is dynamic equilibrium?
the balanced state of a system, where inputs and outputsbalance over time
the coastal system is driven by waveenergy generated within the nearshore
what are inputs + examples?
material or energy moving into the system from outside e.g. precipitation or wind
what are outputs + examples?
material or energy moving from the system to the outside e.g. oceancurrents, riptides, sedimenttransfer and evaporation
what is energy + examples of its effects?
power of drivingforce e.g. energy associated with flowingwater, movement of air - windenergy transferred to waveenergy
what are stores + examples?
the individual elements or parts of a system that contain sediment e.g. beaches, sanddunes, and nearshoresediment
example of dynamic equilibrium?
constructivewaves build up a beach, making it steeper. This encourages the formation of destructivewaves that plunge rather than surge. Redistribution of sediment offshore by destructivewaves reduces the beach gradient which encourages the waves to become more constructive. This is a constant dynamic equilibrium between the type of wave and the angle of the beach
sediment cell: areas along the coastline and in the nearshore area where the movement of material is largely self-contained. It is a closed system -->no sediment is transferredbetweencells. The boundaries are determined by the topography and shape of the coastline
large features like peninsulas, such as the LlynPeninsula in Wales act as huge naturalbarriers that prevent the transfer of sediment. In reality, it's unlikely that the cells are fully closed, due to variations in winddirection and tidalcurrents --> some sediment is transferred. There are also some sub-shells within the major cells
how many sediment cells are there in England and Wales?
11
source: places where sediment is generated - e.g. cliffs, eroding sanddunes, rivers, offshorebars
transfers: places where sediement is transported from one place to another through LSD and offshorecurrents. e.g. beaches, saltmarshes, sanddunes
human intervention e.g. coastal management in the source region may reduce the sediment supply e.g. sea walls preventing cliff erosion
sink: deposition e.g. spits and offshorebars
dynamic equilibrium: sediment is constantly generated in the source region, transported through the transport region and deposited in the sink region. It's reached when the inputs of sediment from the source region are balanced by the amount being deposited in sinks
negative feedback: when the change produced creates effects that operate to reduce or workagainst the original change e.g. when erosion leads to massmovement, the fallensediment acts as a barrierprotecting the cliff from erosion
positive feedback: when the change produced creates effects that operate to increase the original change e.g. People walkingoversanddunes destroys vegetation growing there and causes further erosion