Transcript Document

Coastal Processes
Compression : Air is trapped between the waves and a cliff.
This is compressed & driven into cracks in the rocks causing
great pressure. As the wave retreats it results in sudden
decompression. This activity weakens the rocks.
Longshore drift: waves approach the beach at an angle, driven
by the wind. Run up the beach at an angle and returns at a right
angle… zig zag pattern. The swash carries sediment up the
beach and the backwash carries it down the beach. This causes
movement of sediment along the beach.
Abrasion: Boulders, pebbles and sand pounded against coast
Hydraulic Action: Impact of waves
Attrition: Stone rounded off by impact
Glacial Processes
Plucking: Meltwater penetrates cracks in the rock. This freezes
& expands weakening and fracturing the rock. The galcier
attaches itself to this rock and as it moves it pull or plucks the
rock away. Assisted by freez thaw action.
Abrasion: Rocks attached to side & bed of the galcier scour,
scrape & polish the surfaces they come in contact with. These
cut scratches & grooves in the bedrock, called striae, which
indicate the direction of movement of the galcier.
Basal slip: The sliding movement of a glacier over its rock
flour. (rocks crushed by the glacier)
Freeze-thaw: Breaking of rock due to repeated freezing of water
Mass Movement
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Soil Creep: Movement of soil down slope
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Gravity
Solifluction – swelling of soil, moves soil particles
Frost heave – ice crystals move soil
Earth Flows: Saturated Soil
Lahars or Mud Flows: Large and Rapid, triggered by ice
melts by volcanic eruptions
Slumping: Cliff edge collapses, rotational movement
Coastal Processes
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Coastline – line where sea and land meet
Shore – Area between low and high water mark
 Divided into foreshore and backshore
Waves – product of friction between wind and water
Size and power of wave depends on the fetch(length of open
sea a wave travels over) and the power of the wind
Therefore waves stronger on Atlantic coast than Irish sea coast
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As waves approach shore it gets shallower so friction with the
bottom increases
This slows the bottom so the top spills over breaking the wave
Swash rushes up the beach away from the sea
Backwash comes back towards the sea
Wave types
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Destructive – high energy, 10+ p/m
Break rapidly, plunging vertically, capable of breaking of large
amounts of rock, up to 25 tonnes of pressure per metre
squared, erodes coastline
Constructive – low waves that break gentler, -8 p/m, occur
on shore with gentle gradient, swash spread over large area so
backwash is weak, leads to more material being deposited than
eroded
Wave Refraction
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This causes the waves to bend as they approach the shore
Friction with the bottom near the coast causes the wave to
slow down
Wave in deep water stays at original speed
This causes wave to bend or refract and hit the coast line at an
angle
On headlands the wave slows down in front and waves swing
around to attack the sides eroding them
Little energy left for the bay so deposition occurs there
Coastal Erosion
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Depends on the type of Rock – Hard or Soft
Wave strength – destructive v constructive
Shape of the coastline- wave refraction focuses energy on
headlands
Slope of shore – gently sloping shores cause waves to break
further out so they lose energy
Erosion greater when soft rock lies underneath hard rock,
where rocks are well jointed or when strata dip towards the sea
Rising sea levels increase erosion – expected to rise by 20-25
cm in next 30 yrs in Ireland
Cliffs and Wave Cut Platforms
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Cliff is a vertical slope on the coastline as a result of erosion
E.g. Cliffs of Moher
Wave energy at its greatest when high steep destructive waves
hit the land and erode it through hydraulic action and abrasion
and compression
A notch is cut at high water mark creating an overhang
When overhang develops it will eventually collapse and a cliff
is formed
Cliff retreats inland and increases in height and material
collects at the foot of cliff
This is worn down by attrition and some used to build a wave
built terrace
As the cliff retreats inland it exposes rock underneath with a
gentle seaward slope called a wave cut platform
If this platform gets too big the waves lose all there energy before
reaching the cliff the cliff becomes inactive and erosion ceases
to occur
This can be seen by vegetation growing on the cliff and debris
collecting at the bottom
Vertical cliffs occur in areas of uniform rock or where strata dip
inland
Bays and Headlands
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Coasts rarely worn back evenly due to differential erosion as a
result to differing types of rock resistance
Less resistant rock forms bays while resistant rock forms
headlands
E.g. Galway Bay, Wicklow Head
Mostly caused by hydraulic action, particularly where the rock
has joints and bedding planes
Air compression also adds to the erosive power as does
abrasion and solution
Wave refraction erodes the headlands and makes them more
pronounced while bays are protected from high energy waves
and are the scene of sea deposition forming beaches
Sea caves, Arches and Stacks
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On headlands wave refraction opens up joints, faults or other
weaknesses to form sea caves mainly through abrasion,
Hydraulic action and compression
If the cave is extended all the way through a headland a bridge
like feature called a sea arch is formed – this can also happen
from caves eroding back to back
If arch walls widen and roof is weathered it can collapse
forming a sea stack
If stack is eroded down to sea level its known as a sea stump
Transportation
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Materials broken down by erosion are reduced in size by
attrition until able to be transported
Sediments moved up and down beaches by breaking waves
The water that rushes up a beach is known as the swash and
the water returning to the sea is known as the backwash
Sediments moved by process known as longshore drift
Waves reach beach at an angle and so swash is at an angle but
backwash returns at right angles
This process is repeated.
Beaches
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Result of low energy constructive waves
Created when amount of material deposited is greater then
material eroded
Beaches consist of boulders, pebbles, sand, shingle, mud etc
Some comes from sea erosion but most transported by streams
Beaches are gently sloping between LWM and HWM and can
vary in length
Most beaches have a foreshore and backshore
Backshore has steeper slope, coarser material and is only
reached in highest tides or storm conditions
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The foreshore is lower, gentle gradient and consists of sand,
mud and shell particles
Storm beaches are ridges of large stones thrown up by strong
waves back beyond reach of normal waves
Berms – ridges of coarse material that indicate the high tide
level of constructive waves
Ridges and runnels develop on seaward edge of foreshore and
run parallel to sea where the waves break
Sand dunes develop inland where there is plenty of sand and
prevailing wind comes from the sea
Sand blown inland and is trapped to form beginning of sand
dune
Dunes unstable and will continually migrate unless
consolidated by marram grass e.g. Youghal, Ventry
Sandspits and Tombolos
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Sandspits are long narrow ridges of sand and shingle that are attached to
land on one side
Formed by longshore drift when coast changes direction sharply
Sediments carried off shore and deposited on sea bed building up to form
spit
Continues to grow as long as deposition is greater than erosion
Sand dunes may from on sheltered landward side and beach formed on
seaward side
End can often be recurved due to change in wave direction
Salt marsh can also develop on the landward side
E.g. Strandhill co sligo
Tombolo is a spit that connects an island to the shore e.g. Howth linked to
Sutton Island
Lagoons and Salt Marshes
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Lagoon is small body of water cut off or almost cut off from
open sea
Land cutting it off known as a bay mouth bar
Can be created by sandspit sealing off a entire bay or offshore
bar migrating towards land
Offshore bar in parallel ridge of sand that forms off shore
Occurs on shallow gently sloping coasts so waves break
further out and deposit material
It is increase in height by constructive waves and longshore
drift
Can be moved forwards by waves breaking over it to form a
lagoon E.g.Our Lady’s Island Lake, Wexford
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Salt marshes often develop in these lagoons
Mud and sand deposited by the sea and alluvium deposited by
rivers result in infilling and lagoon becomes shallower
Area becomes colonised by salt loving plants
This increased rate of deposition and builds up to form marsh
that is exposed permanently above normal tide
E.g. Backstrand in Tramore, and Bull Island in Dublin