coastal features - transportation & deposition

19
EROSION – TRANSPORTATION - DEPOSITION Coasts Page

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Page 1: Coastal Features - Transportation & Deposition

EROSION – TRANSPORTATION - DEPOSITION

Coasts Page

Page 2: Coastal Features - Transportation & Deposition

TRANSPORTATION AND DEPOSITION

1. Transportation This is the movement of materials like sand and pebbles by the sea.

2. Deposition This is the material dropped by the sea, usually on a beach.

3. Spit A spit is an area of sand or shingle which either extends at a gentle angle out to sea or which grows across a river estuary.

4. Bar A bar is a barrier of sand stretching across a sheltered bay.

5. Beach This is a landform feature caused by the sea depositing sand and pebbles.

Page 3: Coastal Features - Transportation & Deposition

1. Swash The water which rushes up a beach after the wave breaks.

2. Backwash The water which returns down the beach to the sea.

3. Longshore drift The zig-zag movement of material along a beach caused by the sea's swash and backwash.

TRANSPORTATION AND DEPOSITION

Page 4: Coastal Features - Transportation & Deposition

LONGSHORE DRIFT • ~ Sediment is moved along a shore by Longshore

drift.• 1.        The waves break on the shore at an angle – the

SWASH• 2.       pushing material up the beach• 3.       gravity pulls the wave and sand back down the

beach in a more or less straight line - the BACKWASH• 4.       The next wave picks up the sediment and the

process is repeated.• 5.       If the coastline changes direction away from the

sea, the sediment is still carries along the coast until the change of direction and then it is carried out into the sea and quickly deposited in deeper water.

• 6.       The result is the formation of a spit.

Page 5: Coastal Features - Transportation & Deposition

Process of Longshore Drift

SWASHB

AC

KW

AS

H

SWASH

LONGSHORE DRIFT Sediment gets moved along the beach

Waves approach the

shore at an angle

Page 6: Coastal Features - Transportation & Deposition

A spit a. A spit is a narrow ridge of sand and shingle attached to the coast at one end and ending in open water at the other. The best example in Britain is Spurn Head on the Humber Estuary.

b. Spits are formed by longshore drift - the movement of sand along the coast by waves hitting the coast at an angle. Imagine throwing a ball at an angle to a wall. To get the ball you would have to walk, it would not come back to you. Keep moving throwing the ball at an angle and eventually you would have moved a long way from where you started. Now replace the wall with a beach, you with a wave and the ball with sand and you can imagine how longshore drift works.

c. Spits are formed when the coastline changes direction but the sand carries on moving the same way and builds out into the sea. The best example in Britain is Spurn Head on the Humber Estuary - have a look in an atlas. The sand is moving down from the North and continues moving building out to the South. The spit ends when the water is too deep for the sand to build up above the surface.

• Water behind the spit is quite sheltered, allowing deposition to take place. Mud, sand and silt builds up and plants begin to colonise the area forming salt marshes.

Page 7: Coastal Features - Transportation & Deposition

Formation of a spit

Sediment moves along the beach

Longshore Drift

As the coast changes direction material is deposited to form a spit

The spit grows and the end becomes hooked

A change in the

prevailing wind

direction makes the end hooked

A lagoon forms behind the spit

Sediment builds up in

the sheltered water of the

lagoon

Settlement and farmland grow on the land behind the lagoon.

Page 8: Coastal Features - Transportation & Deposition
Page 9: Coastal Features - Transportation & Deposition

Spurn Head Spit Spurn Point is a narrow sandy promontory approximately five kilometres long. The photo shows Spurn Point from the south. The

buildings in the foreground are a lifeboat station and Humber Pilots base.

Sheltered lagoon filling

with mud

Narrow neck nearly breached

Direction of Longshore Drift ~ Source of deposition from Holderness coast

Spit hooks across the Humber Estuary

Deep water estuary

Page 10: Coastal Features - Transportation & Deposition

Hooked end of the spit

Sheltered lagoon

Direction of Longshore drift

Hurst Ness Spit,

HampshireDirection of Longshore drift

Sheltered lagoon

Original coast

Groynes to stabilise the spit

Page 11: Coastal Features - Transportation & Deposition

BARS

~ a ridge of sediment which is parallel to the coast. It is not always exposed. It may be slightly off-shore or it may be a ridge blocking an estuary.

This is the BarThe lagoon is trapped behind

Page 12: Coastal Features - Transportation & Deposition

TOMBOLO ~ a bar joining an island to the mainland.eg.

Chesil Beach

Page 13: Coastal Features - Transportation & Deposition
Page 14: Coastal Features - Transportation & Deposition

COASTAL DUNES ~ Sand

dunes form on the landward side of some beaches. If lots of beach is exposed at low tide, the wind can dry out and then carry the sand inland. Obstacles catch the particles causing a ridge to form and this is a dune. They are a very valuable natural sea defence. Often they need stabilising with plants like marram grass or netting and need protection from human erosion.

Page 15: Coastal Features - Transportation & Deposition

RIAS ~ flooded river valleys formed by sea level rise usually at the end of an ice age. Eg. FAL

Estuary, Falmouth.

Page 16: Coastal Features - Transportation & Deposition

RAISED BEACHES ~ as the result of a change in sea level beaches can be left some height above

present sea level eg. Marazion, Mounts Bay.

Islay, Scotland

At this location there is a 30 metre raised beach and below it a line of

former cliffs and caves

30m Raised beach

Former cliffs

Lower raised beach Storm ridge

Present beach

Page 17: Coastal Features - Transportation & Deposition

FJORDS ~ flooded glaciated valleys formed in the same way.

Page 18: Coastal Features - Transportation & Deposition

Factors at work on coasts

Page 19: Coastal Features - Transportation & Deposition

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