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p347, 2-19 2. In the summertime, waves are usually low-energy waves. These low- energy waves push sand onshore, so the berm is wider and the beach face is steeper. In the wintertime, waves are usually high-energy waves. These high energy waves carry sediment from the beach face offshore. This beach, then, is narrower with a gentler slope. If sufficient sediment is moved offshore by winter waves, the wintertime beach may be rocky. 3. The speed of the longshore current increases with increasing wave energy (wave height), steeper beach, increasing wave frequency, and increasing angle between breaker and beach. 4. Longshore drift is sediment transported by the longshore current. The stronger/faster the longshore current, the more sediment can be moved. (Just as a faster river can carry more – and larger – sediments) 5. SIMILAR: The flow of water in a stream and in a longshore current is directional and rather narrow. DIFFERENT: Rivers flow in one direction (downhill) all the time. A longshore current’s direction of flow can be reversed depending on the direction of wave approach. 6. The longshore current reverses its direction because the direction of wave approach can differ. Along both U.S. coasts, the primary direction of annual longshore drift is toward the south. 7. Rip currents form when seawater accumulates on a beach and must, because of gravity, return to the ocean. Rip currents flow perpendicular to shore and move swiftly through oncoming breakers. The rip current is usually narrow. A person caught in a rip current should attempt to swim perpendicular to the current flow (parallel to shore) to get out of the usually narrow rip current. If the person is unable to do that, he or she should let the current carry him or her outward until the velocity lessens. 8. Wave-cut cliffs, sea caves, sea arches, sea stacks, and marine terraces are all caused by wave erosion along a rocky shore. - Wave-cut cliffs are formed when waves undercut the lower rocks at the base of a steep escarpment. The undercutting of the base causes part of the cliff to collapse. - Sea caves occur at the base of cliffs where waves erode harder rocks. - Continued wave erosion may enlarge caves into channels that run through a headland, resulting in a sea arch. - If/when the arch collapses, the headland may be separated into two parts. The seaward remnant is the sea stack. - Marine terraces are wave-cut platforms that have been uplifted above sea level. 9. The following features are made up of sediments deposited by waves and longshore current. - A spit is that part of a beach deposit that extends into the open water of a bay. It often has a curved end due to wave diffraction and tidal currents. (ex: Provincetown, Cape Cod, MA) - If the spit grows faster than currents can keep the mouth of the bay open (free from sediments), the spit may “bridge” the bay mouth and close off the bay from the ocean. This then is a bay barrier or bay-mouth bar. - A tombolo is a ridge of sand that extends from a beach to an island or sea stack. (famous example, the beach in Chitty Chitty Bang Bang) - Barrier islands are long linear sand ridges that are separated from the mainland by a lagoon or back bay. (Eastern NC, New Jersey pictured below) Barrier islands lie parallel to the coast. 10. If sea level rises, barrier islands migrate landward as waves wash sand over the dunes. Older peat deposits, laid down in back-bay marshes, are covered by younger sand deposited above. Marsh or peat deposits are older toward the ocean beach and younger toward the current salt marsh. 11. Rivers that carry high sediment loads can build deltas once the rivers debouch (d’BOOSH) into the ocean. If more fluvial (river-carried) sediment is provided than marine processes can redistribute, a bird’sfoot delta results. (ex Mississippi river delta)_ If marine processes can erode and transport sediments faster than the river can deliver them, then the delta will have a smooth curved “arcuate” (curved) shape (ex. Nile river delta) 12. Beach compartments consist of rivers that supply sediment, the beach where longshore current redistributes sediment, and offshore submarine canyons that accumulate sediments. If dams are built across the rivers that provide sediment, the beach will become more and more narrow and may disappear. 13. Primary coasts are geologically youthful and have features that are formed by non-marine processes. The subcategories of primary coasts are listed in Table 11-3 and include the following five main types: land erosion, subaerial (out on land, not underwater) depositon, volcanic, coasts shaped by earth movements, and ice coasts. In contrast, secondary coasts are geologically more mature, and marine processes (physical or biological) have modified the original primary coast. The subcategories of secondary coasts are also listed in Table 11-3 and include the following three main types of secondary coasts: wave erosion, marine deposition, and coasts formed by biologic activity (corals, etc) 14. Tectonic changes in sea level are caused by tectonic movements (uplift or subsidence) of a continent or an ocean basin. These tectonic changes might be large-scale, caused primarily by plate tectonics processes, or smaller scale, caused by sediment loading or ice loading. These tectonic changes are not global, even if they are large scale. For example, tectonic uplift is occurring along the west coast of the U.S. at the same time as tectonic subsidence is occurring along the east and Gulf coasts. In contrast, eustatic changes are global changes in sea level. They are caused by changes in the volume of seawater (glacial ice buildup or melting) or by changes in the volume of the ocean basin itself (changes in spreading rates). Whatever the cause, changes in sea level are evidenced by features that were once submarine but are now subaerial. For example wave cut terraces are exposed many feet above current high tide. Or, features that were once subaerial but are now submarine, such as “drowned” river valleys.) Simplification: Tectonic changes in sea level = CAUSED WHEN LAND MOVES Eustatic changes = CAUSED WHEN WATER MOVES 15. Coasts advance seaward if land is uplifted or sea level drops. Coasts retreat if land is submerged or sea level rises. Actually this is common sense if you visualize the “micro” coastline movement when the tide floods or ebbs. Or the movement of a single wave, for that matter! 16. The four main factors that affect whether coasts are erosional or depositional are erosional features such as wave-cut cliffs, uplift, depositional features, and subsidence. Uplift and subsidence (sinking, “subsiding”) may be caused by tectonic forces or isostatic movements. If uplift occurs, then features shaped by waves will be found above high-tide levels, for example, uplifted marine terraces. If subsidence occurs, then longshore transport can build sand bars and sand ridges. 17. Much of the Atlantic coast is subsiding because it is seismically inactive. Land subsides as ocean lithosphere cools. Some parts are loaded with sediments and are isostatically subsiding (sinking). Other areas, such as Maine, are isostatically rising due to glacial rebound. Some areas, such as the Mississippi Delta, are subsiding because of increased sediment load. Simplification: Think of “isostatics” as either rising or sinking because of buoyancy, only a LOT slower since continental crust flows a LOT more slowly than water! 18. The Atlantic coast is primarily submergent (subsiding/sinking/descending, like a submarine) and is characterized by depositional features such as barrier islands. 19. Types of hard stabilization (structures built to preserve the current shape of a coast or beach.) Groin – barrier built perpendicular to coastline, designed to trap sand and prevent longshore transport. Jetty – nearly identical to a groin but its purpose is not to trap sand, but to protect a harbor from waves. Breakwater – barrier built away from the berm but parallel to the shoreline Seawall – barrier built right on the berm to protect property. Not efficient: they take the brunto of breaking waves (breakwaters are farther out where the waves are fully breaking yet) Some parts of the Atlantic coast are emergent (e.g., Maine) and have uplifted wave-cut features. Glacial moraines form islands, such as Long Island and Cape Cod. Drowned river valleys such as Chesapeake Bay are common. Most areas show evidence of erosion. The Gulf coast is primarily submergent and is characterized by depositional features such as barrier islands. Some parts of the Gulf coast are rapidly subsiding (e.g., the Mississippi Delta area,) and these areas experience the fastest erosion rates. The Pacific coast is primarily emergent and experiences the least erosion. Some beaches are becoming narrower through time because of dams across rivers. 19. Groins and jetties are similar in that these are structures built perpendicular to the shoreline. The primary purpose of groins is to trap sediment between adjacent groins. Jetties also trap sediment, but the main purpose of a jetty is to protect a harbor entrance. A breakwater is a structure built offshore parallel to the coast. The aim of a breakwater is to protect a harbor from more intense wave activity. An unwanted consequence of a breakwater is that sediments are deposited in the harbor. A seawall is built on sand to protect the beach from erosion. In most cases, seawalls do not work well or long. They are frequently undermined by increased wave action on the sea side, so that the wall collapses. An unintended consequence of a seawall is a narrowing of the beach