Lesson 2 Flashcards

1
Q

What is a coast?

A

A system with 3 main components (inputs,processes and outputs). Any change to a particular component will have an impact on the rest of the system

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2
Q

What is the shape of a coast determined by?

A

geology and wave action

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3
Q

What are examples of aspects to geology? (3)

A

resistance to erosion and weathering
number of joints/bedding planes
amount of folding

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4
Q

Wave characteristics? (4)

A

energy
fetch
prevalent and dominate wind direction
Depth of water

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5
Q

What is a cliff profile?

A

The height and angle of a cliff as well as its features

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6
Q

What is marine erosion and examples? (3)

A

Associated with the action of waves. This includes erosion, transportation and deposition.

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7
Q

What are sub aerial processes and examples?

A

Land-based processes which alter the shape of the coastline. A combination of weathering and mass movement. As of limited marine influence its is not removed

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8
Q

What are coastal plains?

A

Areas of low lying, low relief areas close to the coast.

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9
Q

What do coastal plains contain?

A

wetlands and marshes because they are just above sea level and poorly drained to the flatness of the landscape.

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10
Q

How does a deposition of sediment cause coastal plains to form?

A

A deposition of sediment from the land, brought down to the coast by river systems can cause coastal accretion where the coastline gradually moved sea ward.

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11
Q

How does the sea level cause coastal plains to form?

A

As a result of the sea level fall exposing the sea bed, that was once a shallow continental shelf

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12
Q

What are the inputs to a coast? (4)

A

marine- waves
Atmospheric - Solar Energy, Climate
Terrestrial/Land - Tectonics, Geology, gravity
People - Sea defences, tourism/recreation

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13
Q

Types of erosion at the coast?

A

Attrition - Rocks hitting off each other
Abrasion - Waves throw rocks at cliff
Hydraulic action - Force of waves breaking against cliff causes bits to break off
Solution - Rocks dissolve in water

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14
Q

Types of transport at the coast?

A

Suspension - Sediment floating due to it being very fine
Solution - Dissolved material carried along
Salutation - Pebbles bounced off each other
Traction - Large rocks rolled along the sea bed

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15
Q

Types of Deposition at the coast?

A

Only happens by constructive waves as they have a high swash so material is deposited
Or due to a reduction of energy resulting in sheltered bays/shallow water

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16
Q

Types of erosional landforms at the coast? (8)

A

Cliffs, wave cut platforms, headlands, bays, stacks, stumps, arches and caves

17
Q

Types of Depositional landforms at the coast? (4)

A

Beaches, spits, salt marshes and mangroves

18
Q

Types of outputs at the coast?

A

Material carried to sea

Material deposited above the high water mark

19
Q

What is deposition?

A

The process which waves and tides lose energy, stop transport and release eroded material.

20
Q

Where is the Pembrokeshire coast?

A

South West of Wales

21
Q

What is the geology at the Pembrokeshire coast?

A

sedimentary and igneous as a result of volcanic activity

22
Q

What types of processes operate at the Pembrokeshire coast?

A

Marine and subaerial processes

23
Q

What is the dominant wave direction at the Pembrokeshire coast and what is the fetch length?

A

South westerly and the fetch is large

24
Q

What else can contribute towards the length of the waves?

A

Atlantic weather systems, can generate waves 5-10 meters high

25
Q

What type of coastline is the Pembrokeshire coast?

A

concordant and discordant

26
Q

What are the main headlands at the Pembrokeshire coast called and which part of the coast do they form?

A

St David and St Ann’s head, relatively resistant igneous rock.
Discordant

27
Q

Where are the fault and small features eg caves found at the Pembrokeshire coast?

A

concordant part, rock is limestone, easily eroded