Coastal Geography Public

Coastal Geography

Antonia Blankenberg
Course by Antonia Blankenberg, updated more than 1 year ago Contributors

Description

An introduction to coastal geography. This course will outline the basics of coastal geography, looking at areas such as coastal landforms, rock cycles, rock types, weathering, coastal management and more.

Module Information

Description

This course gives a fundamental understanding to coastal geography. Topics discussed include fundamental geology, coastal processes, landforms, and management, featuring diagrams and images to aid understanding.

Description

A number of forces help to create coastlines, including heat, pressure, weathering and erosion. Rocks may be Igneous, Sedimentary or Metamorphic. This simple image illustrates these processes at work.

Description

What separates Igneous, Sedimentary and Metamorphic rock types? This MindMap distinguishes between the formation of these types as well as describing some of their characteristics.

Description

This module takes a more detailed look at some rock types. These are Granite and Basalt (Igneous), Chalk and Sandstone (sedimentary), and Schist and Slate (Metamorphic).

Note

All you need to know about Granite, Sandstone, Basalt, Chalk, Slate and Schist in this easy to follow study note to help with geography learning.
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Description

Flashcards to help remember the key terms associated with weathering and erosion. These include variations such as mechanical, chemical and biological weathering, as well as abrasion and attrition as factors in erosion.

Description

These notes examine the processes involved in both freeze-thaw weathering and also in exfoliation. Over a sustained period, these events can radically alter a landscape.

Description

The dynamic water activity can greatly change the coastal rock which rests beside the sea. Some coastlines are concordant and some are discordant. Longshore drift and transportation help shape these landscapes.

Description

Beaches can vary greatly, as well as the other features of coastline. These include caves and stacks; spits and bars. These features give a coast a personality. Sand formation can be the difference between a beautiful beach and one that can disappear.

Description

Human intervention is sometimes necessary to prevent the catastrophic destruction of a coastline. There are a number of tools available such as sea walls, groynes and gabions.

Description

Flooding and coastal recession can be devastating to local communities. Coastal realignment and managed retreat are two types of large scale coastal engineering projects.

Description

Revise what you have learned on this course on coastal landforms and processes. Take this quiz to see what you have learned.
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