Coastal Processes

Cards (27)

  • Coastal processes
    Divided into marine (offshore, water-based) and terrestrial (onshore, land-based) processes
  • Coastal processes
    • Wave action
    • Erosion
    • Transportation
    • Weathering
    • Mass movement
  • Waves
    Formed by winds blowing over the surface of the sea
  • Factors affecting wave height and strength
    • Fetch
    • Amount of time the wind blows
    • Strength of the wind
  • Swash
    Movement of water up the beach
  • Backwash
    Return movement of water down the beach
  • Types of waves
    • Destructive
    • Constructive
  • Destructive waves erode the coastline in four ways: hydraulic action, attrition, corrosion, abrasion
  • Abrasion
    Erosion by rubbing, like sandpaper
  • Attrition
    Erosion by particles colliding and wearing each other down
  • Transportation of material
    1. Traction
    2. Saltation
    3. Suspension
    4. Solution
  • Longshore drift
    The movement of sediments along a coast by waves that approach at an angle to the shore but then the swash recedes directly away from it.
  • Longshore driftcharacteristics

    1. Prevailing wind pushes waves at an angle to the beach
    2. Swash carries material up the beach at the same angle
    3. Backwash carries material down the beach at right angles
    4. Repeated zig-zag movement transports material along the beach
  • Weathering
    Is the physical or chemical breakdown of rock in-situ (in the place where they are)
  • Types of weathering
    • Freeze-thaw (mechanical)
    • Salt weathering (mechanical)
    • Chemical weathering
    • Biological weathering
  • Weathering weakens cliffs and makes them more vulnerable to erosion
  • Freeze-thaw weathering
    Water gets into cracks, freezes and expands, opening cracks wider
  • Chemical weathering

    Rainwater reacts with minerals in rock, creating new material
  • Biological weathering
    Plants and organisms grow in cracks, forcing rock apart
  • Mass movement
    Downhill movement of material under the influence of gravity
  • Types of mass movement
    • Soil creep
    • Flow
    • Slide
    • Fall
    • Slump
  • Soil creep
    Slow downhill movement of soil, below 1cm per year
  • Flow
    Occurs on slopes 5-15 degrees, after soil becomes saturated
  • Slide
    Movement of material 'en masse' that remains together until hitting the bottom
  • Fall
    Rapid movement on steep slopes, caused by weathering, rainfall, earthquakes, hot weather
  • Slump
    Rotational slip of a large area of land on weaker rock types like clay
  • Sub-aerial processes affecting cliff shape
    1. Freeze-thaw weathering weakens cliff, allowing easier erosion
    2. Chemical weathering dissolves less resistant rock faster, changing cliff shape