Cliff Recession and Management Flashcards

1
Q

who are the central government players involved at Holderness and what do they do?

A

The EA, who are responisble for managment. There budget was cut in 2010

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2
Q

What is the role of local government at Holderness?

A

They are responsible for managment

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3
Q

What do different economic stakeholders want? (2)

A
  1. The tourist industry want protection of high value land

2. Farmers want not as valuable farmland protected

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4
Q

An example of an environmental stakeholder and what they want?

A

RSPB want to protect spurnhead so there’s a continuing flow of sand, mudflats of humber estuary

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5
Q

What are the physical reasons for cliff recession at Holderness? (6)

A
  1. Geology
  2. Fetch
  3. Weather system
  4. Sea floor
  5. Longshore drift
  6. Subaerial processes
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6
Q

What is most of the Holderness coast made and what id the effect of this?

A

glacial till, which is structually weak with little resistance to erosion

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7
Q

What geology has resulted in the formation of Flamborough Head?

A

Chalk that surronds boulder clay

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8
Q

What is the fetch like for Holderness?

A

Relativly small

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9
Q

What adds to the energy of the waves at Holderness?

A

swell circulates around the UK and is added to by Atlantic fetch

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10
Q

What produces strong winds and waves at Holderness?

A

Low pressure weather systems

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11
Q

What is the sea floor like at Holderness and what does this mean?

A

The seafloor is relativly deep so waves reach cliffs without being weakened by friction

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12
Q

Why does sediment not accumulate and create beaches at Holderness?

A

The beaches are mainly clay, which is easily transported out to sea in suspension rather than accumulating

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13
Q

What are the beaches like which do exist at Holderness?

A

they are narrow and do not absorb wave energy

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14
Q

Why types of subaerial processes are important at Holderness?

A

Mechanical and biological

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15
Q

Why does slumping affect boulder clay cliffs at Holderness?

A

Wetting and drying of clay causes expansion and shrinkage of clay causes cracks, which rain can enter, making the cliff saturated and slide due to gravity

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16
Q

Where are sea walls along Holderness?

A

Holiday resorts such as Hornsea and Withersea

17
Q

Where are the groynes at Holderness and what are the result of them?

A

Mappleton, causing terminal groyne syndrome down drift

18
Q

What is the strategy at Spurn head?

A

‘do nothing’ as the land is no longer worth saving

19
Q

What are the advantages of beach nourishment? (2)

A
  1. beach looks natural

2. provides amenity for recreation and so supports local toursit industry

20
Q

What are the disavantages of beach nourishment? (3)

A
  1. cost about £10 per m^2
  2. has to be repeated frequently
  3. sedinment dredged from offshore so sediment cell balance is changed and deepens the water with may create more destructive waves
21
Q

What are the advantages of cliff regarding? (3)

A
  1. creates natural looking slopes
  2. certainty and confidence to property owners and reduces risk of sudden loss of property
  3. remain stable as slope is protected from marine erosion
22
Q

What are the disadvantages of cliff regarding? (4)

A
  1. cost about £1 million
  2. some land and property will be lost when the slope angle is changed
  3. extreme natural conditions may overwhelm the changes
  4. stablisation measures such as cliff drainage and planting also needed
23
Q

What are the advantages of cliff drainage? (2)

A
  1. looks natural once completed

2. reduces mass movement, bringing confidence to locals

24
Q

What are the disadvantages of cliff drainage? (2)

A
  1. difficult to implement along the whole cliff without disrupting the cohesion of the rock layers
  2. will not prevent mass movement, only reduces it
25
Q

What are the advantages of dune stabilisation? (2)

A
  1. looks natural and provides a natural ecosystem and recreational areea
  2. effective barrier to higher sea levels and tides
26
Q

What are the disadvantages of dune stabilisation? (2)

A
  1. may need to be fenced during works which reduces short term amenity value
  2. powerful storms mean this only works for a short time
27
Q

What are the advantages of managed retreat? (2)

A
  1. allows natural processes to take place

2. can extent current ecosystems

28
Q

What are the disadvantages of managed retreat? (3)

A
  1. needs agreement from land and property owners
  2. does not prevent land loss
  3. currently no compensation in the UK for land and property loss