Coastal landforms

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  • Created by: EEC2145
  • Created on: 08-02-23 15:59
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  • Coastal landforms
    • Processes
      • Solution
        • The chemical composition of the rock and the natural acidity of rain and the salt water erodes the rock, chemically breaking them down
      • Abrasion
        • Sediment carried is hurled against the cliffs by the waves and erodes the cliffs, and themselves in the process
      • Attrition
        • The sediment being carried crashes into each other, smoothing them down and making them smaller.
      • Hydraulic action
        • Water is forced into joints and cracks in the rocks resulting in them widening until the rock eventually breaks off
      • Longshore drift
        • When waves approach the beach at an angle sediment is moved in that direction with the swash of the wave
          • The backwash is straight down the beach resulting in more movement when the next wave comes
            • In this way sediment is slowly moved in the prevailing wind direction
    • Landforms
      • Depositional
        • Spit
          • Longshore drift moves sediment further than the coast and deposits it to form a spit
          • Bar
            • A spit that extends over a bay forming a lagoon behind it
        • Bar
          • A spit that extends over a bay forming a lagoon behind it
        • Sand dunes
          • Fine sediment is transported through aerial processes and then deposited at the back of the beach when winds drop
        • Beaches
          • Sediment is deposited in bays forming beaches
        • Tombolo
          • Can be formed multiple ways however more often than not due to a loss of energy meaning the sediment is deposited
        • Delta
          • Only found in low energy environments where the sediment is deposited forming a delta off the coastline
      • Erosional
        • Geos
          • If the blowhole becomes large enough that the unsupported rock cannot hold itself then it collapses forming a narrow gorge-like landform leading to where the blowhole used to be.
        • Blowholes
          • When the roof of a cave is eroded due to hydraulic action, there is a tunnel leading to a gap in the ceiling which water can fire out of, hence the name blowhole as it's like a whale
          • Geos
            • If the blowhole becomes large enough that the unsupported rock cannot hold itself then it collapses forming a narrow gorge-like landform leading to where the blowhole used to be.
        • Shore platforms
          • Erosional processes at the base of the cliff causes mass movement, rockfall, causing the cliff to "retreat" leaving behind a flat platform where the cliff used to be
        • Caves, arches stacks stumps
          • A fault or joint in the cliff face is exploited and widened until it extends into the cliff (cave)
            • If erosional processes cause the cave to extend through to the other side of the cliff the an arch has been formed
              • The arch is being eroded by weathering processes and coastal erosional ones too. When the weight of the unsupported area becomes too great it collapses resulting in a stack which is separate to the rest of the coastline.
                • This stack is eroded further and its upper part may break off. When this happens, a smaller stack is formed called a stump

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