Role of erosional and depositional processes in the development of landforms

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7 Terms

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What are headlands and bays?

Headland and bay 

  • Found in areas of alternating bands of resistant (hard) and less resistant (soft) rocks running perpendicular to oncoming waves (discordant coastline)

  • Initially, less resistant rock (e.g. clay) is eroded back, forming a bay

  • A bay is an inlet of the sea where the land curves inwards, usually with a beach

  • The more resistant rock (e.g. limestone) is left protruding out to sea as a headland

headland--bay-formation

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What are coves?

Cove

  • A cove forms where the coastline has bands of resistant and less resistant rock running parallel to the oncoming waves (concordant coastline)

  • There is usually a band of resistant rock facing the oncoming waves, with a band of softer rock behind

  • Wave processes of abrasion, corrosion and hydraulic action will exploit faults in the resistant rock and erode through to the softer rock 

  • Further wave action will erode the softer rock quickly, which will leave behind a circular cove with a narrow entrance to the sea

  • Wave refraction within the cove spreads out the erosion in all directions, creating the typical horseshoe shape

  • Lulworth Cove in Dorset, UK, is a good example of a cove

Cove formation

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What are cliffs and wave-cut platforms?

Cliff and wave-cut platform

  • Cliffs are shaped through erosion and weathering processes

  • Less resistant rock erodes quickly and will form sloping cliff faces

  • Steep cliffs are formed where there is harder rock facing the sea

  • A wave-cut platform is a wide gently sloped surface found at the foot of a cliff:

    • As the sea attacks the base of a cliff between the high and low water mark, a wave-cut notch is formed

    • Abrasion, corrosion and hydraulic action further extend the notch back into the cliff

    • The undercutting of the cliff leads to instability and collapse of the cliff

    • The backwash of the waves, carries away the eroded material, leaving behind a wave-cut platform

    • The process repeats and the cliff continues to retreat, leading to a coastal retreat

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What are caves, arches, stacks and stumps?

Cave, arch, stack and stump

  • Found on a headland due to wave action and sub-aerial weathering

  • Any weaknesses in the headland are exploited by erosional processes of hydraulic action, abrasion and corrosion

  • As the crack begins to widen, abrasion will begin to wear away at the forming cave

  • The cave will become larger and eventually break through the headland to form an arch

  • The base of the arch continually becomes wider and thinner through erosion below and weathering from above

  • Eventually, the roof of the arch collapses, leaving behind an isolated column of rock called a stack

  • The stack is undercut at the base by wave action and sub-aerial weathering above until it collapses to form a stump

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What is a beach?

Beach

  • Form in sheltered areas such as bays

  • Deposition occurs through constructive wave movement, where the swash is stronger than the backwash

  • Beach formation usually occurs in the summer months when the weather is calmer

  • Sometimes sand from offshore bars can blow onto the shore by strong winds

  • Blown sand can create sand dunes at the backshore of a beach

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What is a spit?

Spit

  • An extended stretch of sand or shingle that extends out to sea from the shore

  • Spits occur when there is a change in the shape of the coastline

  • Or the mouth of a river, which prevents a spit from forming across the estuary

  • A spit may or may not have a 'hooked' end, depending on opposing winds and currents

  • A good example is Spurn Point, which stretches for three and a half miles across the Humber Estuary in the northeast of England

Stages of Formation:

  • Sediment is transported by longshore drift

  • Where the coastline changes direction, a shallow, sheltered area allows for deposition of sediment

  • Due to increased friction, more deposition occurs 

  • Eventually, a spit slowly builds up to sea level and extends in length

  • If the wind changes direction, then the wave pattern alters and results in a hooked end

  • The area behind the spit becomes sheltered

  • Silts are deposited here to form salt marshes or mud flats

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What is a bar?

Bar

  • When a spit grows across a bay, and joins two headlands together

  • A bar of sand is formed (sandbar)

  • Sandbars can also form offshore due to the action of breaking waves from a beach