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Coastal Processes and
     Landforms
Wind and Waves

• Fetch – the
  amount of open
  water influenced
  by wind
• Swell – larger
  waves caused by
  storms out to sea
Evidence of the power of wind
Trees learn to grow with the wind
Coastal Zones
• A beach is part of a coastal system, which
 includes several zones defined by their
 proximity to shore and the dominant
 processes that occur within them.
Features of Waves




• Crest
• Trough
• Wavelength
Speed of a wave
• Speed = Wavelength
              Period
•   Period: time it takes a
    wavelength to pass a
    given location
Formation of Breakers
Destructive Waves
•   Created in storm conditions.
•   Big, strong waves from powerful, consistent wind
•   High wave energy from travelling over a long fetch.
•   Erode the coast.
•   Stronger backwash than swash.
•   Short wavelength and high + steep.
Constructive Waves
•   Calm weather + less powerful
•   Deposit material, building up beaches.
•   Swash is stronger than the backwash.
•   Long wavelength and are low in height.
Swash
        • Water moving up the
         beach
Backwash
           • Water running back
               down the beach
               under the next wave
           •   Gravity
           •   Strong = undertow
Destructive wave action
Patong Beach, Thailand



              Berm formed after
              intense rain storm.
Surf Zone
Bigger Surf Zone
4 Coastal Erosion Processes
How is sediment transported
 along a coastline ?
• Most waves move
 toward the shore at
 a slight angle.


• Water (swash) from
 each breaking wave
 is oblique.
Shoreline Currents
• Most waves strike
    shorelines at angles
•   Swash washes ashore
    diagonally
•   Backwash go straight
    back down
•   Sediments are carried
    by longshore drift
Rip Currents
• Strong surface
    currents that flow
    away from the beach
•   Too much water
    converges at the
    shore
•   2 longshore currents
    meet
La Jolla, San Diego, USA
Wickaninnish Beach, Tofino, BC
Rip Currents and Longshore Drift
How to spot a rip channel




                                                               Head of
Rip channels                            Rip channel
                                        (as seen from beach)   Rip channel
(as seen from the air)


           Note: a rip current is different from undertow
Coastal Deposition
• When the sea loses energy, it drops the
 sand, rock particles and pebbles it has
 been carrying.
  – when the swash is stronger than the
    backwash
  – waves enter an area of shallow water
  – waves enter a sheltered area, eg a cove
    or bay.
  – there is little wind
  – there is a good supply of material.
Formation of Wave-Cut Platform

1. Weather weakens the top of the cliff.
2. The sea attacks the base of the cliff
   forming a wave-cut notch.
3. The notch increases in size causing the
   cliff to collapse.
4. The backwash carries the rubble towards
   the sea forming a wave-cut platform.
5. The process repeats and the cliff
   continues to retreat
Refraction of Waves

• Coastlines are rarely straight
• Waves bend when there is a change in its
  speed
• What changes speed of waves?
  – What causes a wave to slow down?
     • Change in depth (or shallowness)
Headlands and Bays
El Arco
El Arco, Cabo San Lucas, Mexico
Arches from wave erosion
               • Headland is attacked
                   by waves
               •   Hydraulic pressure
                   and abrasion
Early stage of an arch in Oregon
Sea Stacks
Haystack Rock, Cannon Beach, OR
Headlands and Sea Stacks
Arch
Ocean Geyser
Spouting Horn
Lagoon
Depositional Landforms
• Beaches
  – Constructive waves
  – Larger sediments can
    be carried further up
    the beach during
    storms
  – Smallest sediments
    near the water
Depositional Landforms
• Spit
  – Longshore drift moves
    material along the
    coastline.
  – material is deposited and
    extends from mainland.
  – grows and develops a
    hook if wind direction
    changes
  – creates a sheltered area
    where silt is deposited and
    mud flats or salt marshes
    form.
Crescent Beach, White Rock, BC
Depositional Landforms
• Tombolo
  – a spit connecting an
    island to the mainland.
Types of Coastlines
• It is difficult to categorize coastlines.
• The form of a coast is a result of the
  interactions of four factors:
  – 1) any abrupt change in sea-level,
  – 2) the amount of sediment supplied to the
    coast by rivers,
  – 3) the movement of that sediment upon
    its arrival at the coast by oceanic processes,
    and
  – 4) whether tides or waves are most
    effective in moving the sediment.
Types of Coastlines
• Emergent              • Submergent
  – Raised coastline      – Sunken coastline
     • Why?                  • Why?
  – Drop in sea level     – Rise in sea level
                             • Rias: flooded river
                                valleys
                              • Fjords: flooded glacial
                                troughs
                              • Estuaries: flooded river
                                delta
Sydney, Australia
Types of Coastlines
• Concordant                  • Disconcordant
      • think “Cordillera”      – Alternating ridges of
  – Alternating ridges of         hard and soft rock
    hard and soft bedrock         perpendicular to
    aligned parallel to           coastline
    coastline                   – Headlands and bays
  – If water breaks
    through a weak point
    in the hard ridge, soft
    rock behind erodes to
    form coves
  – Dalmatian Coast,
    Croatia
Dalmatian Coast, Croatia
Duddle Door, Dorset, England
Coral Reefs
•Reefs are natural structures of rock
formed by marine animals.

•Today’s reefs are largely made by
corals, but in the geological past,
have been constructed by sponges
and bizarre clams.

•Reef-building organisms build
skeletons of calcium carbonate in
the form of aragonite or calcite.

                                        Great Barrier Reef,
                                        Australia
Coral polyps
(individual coral animals)




Coral reefs are often called the “rainforests of the sea” due to the
great diversity of creatures that form them. Note that the brilliant
colours apparent in corals are from the microscopic algae in the coral
tissues (different colours absorb different wavelengths of light)
Conditions necessary
         for reef development
•Large reefs are limited to the warm seawater areas of
the tropics.

•Calcium carbonate is easier to precipitate in warm water
than in cold water.

•Secretion of calcium carbonate is aided by microscopic
cells of algae that live in the tissues of reef builders (the
algae remove carbon dioxide from the tissues, decreasing
the acidity of the water).
Conditions necessary
         for reef development

Reefs also tend to preferentially form in areas where:

1. Little clastic sediment occurs (such sediment
   particles smother reef builders).
2. Nutrient levels are low.
3. Water is shallow
Reef zones
Reef builders are zoned in a reef according to their form
(encrusting forms tend to dominate the reef crest where
wave action is strongest, while more delicate branching
forms are confined to deeper water zones where water action
is more gentle)




 A lagoon can develop behind a reef, where it is protected from
 strong waves
A special kind of reef: atoll

               • An atoll is a special
                 kind of reef that is
                 ring-shaped and has
                 a central lagoon.
How an Atoll Forms
• An atoll is formed first as a reef that
  fringes a volcanic island.
• As the island sinks (after volcanic activity
  has ceased and the crust has cooled,
  becoming denser), the reef continues to
  build upward, eventuallyGilligan’s Island ? as a
                             ending up
  ring-shaped structure.
Coastal Processes and Landforms

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Coastal Processes and Landforms

  • 2. Wind and Waves • Fetch – the amount of open water influenced by wind • Swell – larger waves caused by storms out to sea
  • 3. Evidence of the power of wind
  • 4. Trees learn to grow with the wind
  • 5. Coastal Zones • A beach is part of a coastal system, which includes several zones defined by their proximity to shore and the dominant processes that occur within them.
  • 6. Features of Waves • Crest • Trough • Wavelength
  • 7. Speed of a wave • Speed = Wavelength Period • Period: time it takes a wavelength to pass a given location
  • 9. Destructive Waves • Created in storm conditions. • Big, strong waves from powerful, consistent wind • High wave energy from travelling over a long fetch. • Erode the coast. • Stronger backwash than swash. • Short wavelength and high + steep.
  • 10. Constructive Waves • Calm weather + less powerful • Deposit material, building up beaches. • Swash is stronger than the backwash. • Long wavelength and are low in height.
  • 11. Swash • Water moving up the beach
  • 12. Backwash • Water running back down the beach under the next wave • Gravity • Strong = undertow
  • 13. Destructive wave action Patong Beach, Thailand Berm formed after intense rain storm.
  • 16. 4 Coastal Erosion Processes
  • 17. How is sediment transported along a coastline ? • Most waves move toward the shore at a slight angle. • Water (swash) from each breaking wave is oblique.
  • 18. Shoreline Currents • Most waves strike shorelines at angles • Swash washes ashore diagonally • Backwash go straight back down • Sediments are carried by longshore drift
  • 19. Rip Currents • Strong surface currents that flow away from the beach • Too much water converges at the shore • 2 longshore currents meet
  • 20. La Jolla, San Diego, USA
  • 22.
  • 23.
  • 24. Rip Currents and Longshore Drift
  • 25.
  • 26. How to spot a rip channel Head of Rip channels Rip channel (as seen from beach) Rip channel (as seen from the air) Note: a rip current is different from undertow
  • 27. Coastal Deposition • When the sea loses energy, it drops the sand, rock particles and pebbles it has been carrying. – when the swash is stronger than the backwash – waves enter an area of shallow water – waves enter a sheltered area, eg a cove or bay. – there is little wind – there is a good supply of material.
  • 28. Formation of Wave-Cut Platform 1. Weather weakens the top of the cliff. 2. The sea attacks the base of the cliff forming a wave-cut notch. 3. The notch increases in size causing the cliff to collapse. 4. The backwash carries the rubble towards the sea forming a wave-cut platform. 5. The process repeats and the cliff continues to retreat
  • 29. Refraction of Waves • Coastlines are rarely straight • Waves bend when there is a change in its speed • What changes speed of waves? – What causes a wave to slow down? • Change in depth (or shallowness)
  • 31.
  • 33. El Arco, Cabo San Lucas, Mexico
  • 34. Arches from wave erosion • Headland is attacked by waves • Hydraulic pressure and abrasion
  • 35.
  • 36. Early stage of an arch in Oregon
  • 40. Arch
  • 41.
  • 42.
  • 45.
  • 47. Depositional Landforms • Beaches – Constructive waves – Larger sediments can be carried further up the beach during storms – Smallest sediments near the water
  • 48. Depositional Landforms • Spit – Longshore drift moves material along the coastline. – material is deposited and extends from mainland. – grows and develops a hook if wind direction changes – creates a sheltered area where silt is deposited and mud flats or salt marshes form.
  • 50. Depositional Landforms • Tombolo – a spit connecting an island to the mainland.
  • 51. Types of Coastlines • It is difficult to categorize coastlines. • The form of a coast is a result of the interactions of four factors: – 1) any abrupt change in sea-level, – 2) the amount of sediment supplied to the coast by rivers, – 3) the movement of that sediment upon its arrival at the coast by oceanic processes, and – 4) whether tides or waves are most effective in moving the sediment.
  • 52. Types of Coastlines • Emergent • Submergent – Raised coastline – Sunken coastline • Why? • Why? – Drop in sea level – Rise in sea level • Rias: flooded river valleys • Fjords: flooded glacial troughs • Estuaries: flooded river delta
  • 54. Types of Coastlines • Concordant • Disconcordant • think “Cordillera” – Alternating ridges of – Alternating ridges of hard and soft rock hard and soft bedrock perpendicular to aligned parallel to coastline coastline – Headlands and bays – If water breaks through a weak point in the hard ridge, soft rock behind erodes to form coves – Dalmatian Coast, Croatia
  • 57. Coral Reefs •Reefs are natural structures of rock formed by marine animals. •Today’s reefs are largely made by corals, but in the geological past, have been constructed by sponges and bizarre clams. •Reef-building organisms build skeletons of calcium carbonate in the form of aragonite or calcite. Great Barrier Reef, Australia
  • 58. Coral polyps (individual coral animals) Coral reefs are often called the “rainforests of the sea” due to the great diversity of creatures that form them. Note that the brilliant colours apparent in corals are from the microscopic algae in the coral tissues (different colours absorb different wavelengths of light)
  • 59. Conditions necessary for reef development •Large reefs are limited to the warm seawater areas of the tropics. •Calcium carbonate is easier to precipitate in warm water than in cold water. •Secretion of calcium carbonate is aided by microscopic cells of algae that live in the tissues of reef builders (the algae remove carbon dioxide from the tissues, decreasing the acidity of the water).
  • 60. Conditions necessary for reef development Reefs also tend to preferentially form in areas where: 1. Little clastic sediment occurs (such sediment particles smother reef builders). 2. Nutrient levels are low. 3. Water is shallow
  • 61. Reef zones Reef builders are zoned in a reef according to their form (encrusting forms tend to dominate the reef crest where wave action is strongest, while more delicate branching forms are confined to deeper water zones where water action is more gentle) A lagoon can develop behind a reef, where it is protected from strong waves
  • 62. A special kind of reef: atoll • An atoll is a special kind of reef that is ring-shaped and has a central lagoon.
  • 63. How an Atoll Forms • An atoll is formed first as a reef that fringes a volcanic island. • As the island sinks (after volcanic activity has ceased and the crust has cooled, becoming denser), the reef continues to build upward, eventuallyGilligan’s Island ? as a ending up ring-shaped structure.