Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Coasts  I can distinguish between primary and secondary coasts.  I can describe different types of beaches.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Coasts  I can distinguish between primary and secondary coasts.  I can describe different types of beaches."— Presentation transcript:

1 Coasts  I can distinguish between primary and secondary coasts.  I can describe different types of beaches.

2 Types of Coasts  Primary coasts  Effect of ice ages (glaciers)  Effect of sediment carried by rivers  Effect of wind  Effect of volcanic activity (lava flows)  Effect of tectonic activity (uplift & subsistence)  Erosion due to running surface water  Secondary coasts  Erosion due to the movement of the sea  Deposition of sediments due to movement of sea  Stabilization due to marine plant growth

3 Finding the best beach to sunbathe or snorkel: WA shores and beaches Along WA coast and Puget Sound, beaches come in many textures and types  Terrain includes:  Steep bluffs  Forested slopes  Beaches  River deltas  Tide flats  Spits

4 4 What did the glaciers leave behind? Primary Coasts in Puget Sound  Puget Sound is a fjords. Fjords are:  Long, narrow inlets with steep sides, created in a valley carved by glacial activity  Long, deep narrow channels look like a U-shaped cross section Land

5 5 What is a sill?  Mound of sediment debris and rubble left behind by retreat of glacier  forming a lip, creating a shallow entrance  Sills located at Admiralty Inlet, Tacoma Narrows, entrance of Hood Canal and Main Basin glacial moraine Main Basin sillssill

6 The basins of Puget Sound are fronted by sills Hood Canal Main Basin Whidbey Basin South Sound Admiralty Inlet

7 What did the glaciers leave behind? Primary Coasts  Bluffs rim most of the WA coast and Sound shoreline  Steep, rising 50 to 500 vertical feet high  Many of these bluffs are made of glacial and interglacial deposits of sand, gravel, silt and clay Bluffs Nourish Beaches Eroding bluffs provide building materials for beaches. Sediment or eroded "bluff stuff" drops to the base of the bluffs, where it is gradually carried along the shore by wind and waves. These bluff sediments help build the forms of secondary coasts.

8 Bluff Erosion: How fast?  http://www.cnn.com/video/data/2.0/video/we ather/2009/10/13/von.wa.landslide.aerials.komo.html http://www.cnn.com/video/data/2.0/video/we ather/2009/10/13/von.wa.landslide.aerials.komo.html  Bluff erosion is affected by  geology  waves  weather  Rates vary from 0.1 inch to 2 feet/year Bluff erosion occurs naturally on Puget Sound. Many bluffs are naturally unstable because of soil, slope, and water conditions...

9 Landslide Hazards along Puget Sound  Geology  Gravity  Weather  Groundwater  Wave action  Human actions

10  Seattle Landslides: Winter 1996-97  Winter storms brought a mix of heavy rain, rapid snowmelt, and saturated soils triggering more than 100 slides in Seattle Landslide Hazards along Puget Sound Perkins Lane Magnolia Bluff

11  Local beaches are built of sand and gravel delivered to the shore by erosion and landslides –  Discovery Park, Point Wilson, Dungeness, Semiahmoo Spit, and Tolmie State Park to name a few Landslides build beaches

12 Where do you want to vacation?  Secondary coasts  Beaches  Dunes  Spits  Tombolos  Sand bars  Sea stacks

13 Rocky Beaches Rock beaches are made of bedrock and boulders too big to be moved by currents or waves Rocks provide homes for marine life in cracks, crevices, and tidepools

14 Gravel Beaches Gravel beaches are by far the most common beaches in Puget Sound and off the WA coast A gravel beach can be made of small boulders or mud, sand, and gravel mixed together Mixed gravel beaches often harbor more marine creatures

15 Sand beaches Most sandy beaches scattered along Puget Sound have very little wave action They occur near the mouths of bays or rivers

16 Mud beaches Follow a stream or river to the coast, and you'll often find a mud beach or mudflat. Look for wide open tideflats and meandering tidal channels. Two examples of mud beaches are found at Mud Bay in Thurston County and Fidalgo Bay in Skagit County. Mud beaches are only found in protected areas because high waves and currents wash mud away.

17 Dunes  Hill of sand created and modified by the wind  Usually run parallel to shoreline directly inland from the beach  Protect land from storm waves  Can also form by the action of water flow

18 Deltas: streams of sediment  Deltas form where streams and rivers deposit sediments faster than waves can remove them  Rivers and streams bring sediment down to the coasts  Waves and currents sort these materials

19 Spits  Strip of beach which extends into deeper water  Most spits straighten a curving shoreline  Often form a straight ridge of sediment across a bay  Develop in the direction of shore drift (longshore transport)

20 Dungeness Spit  Longest natural sand spit in the United States  Extending 5 miles into the Strait of Juan De Fuca  Grown about 15 feet per year for the past 120 years

21 Tombolo  Tombolo is a spit or bar connecting an island to the mainland  Form in areas protected by large waves  The sediments come from the mainland beach or the island  A single tombolo is a single ridge connecting to an island  A double tombolo has two ridges extending to shore. Double tombolos can form in areas where there is a seasonal shift in shore drift Decatur Head, San Juan Islands

22 Sand bars Bars are ridges of sand seen when tides are low Bars can be unstable, shifting with storms and seasons During storms, bars can break the force of big wave

23 Sea stacks  Small rock islands and tall, slender pinnacles of rock  Formed when part of a headland is eroded by wave action  Water weakens cracks in the headland, causing them to collapse

24 Shore Shelter  Shore forms provide homes for wildlife  Shorebirds and gulls feed on bars, spits, and tombolos  The river deltas, and spits provide breeding areas for fish such as sand lance and surf smelt  Bald eagles and other birds use drift logs on spits for perches during the day  In summer months, Harbor seals may give birth to and nurse pups on bars Drift logs on Dungeness Spit provide perches for birds

25 Over the Shoreline  Bluffs and narrow beaches rim most of the coast and Sound  Most bluffs are made of glacial and interglacial sediments layers of sand, cobble, and clay  Eroding bluffs provide most of the building materials for beaches

26 Summary  Primary coasts: formed by nonmarine processes  Secondary coasts: modified by marine processes  Dynamic equilibrium of shoreline forms and beaches  Supply, removal, and longshore transport of sediments


Download ppt "Coasts  I can distinguish between primary and secondary coasts.  I can describe different types of beaches."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google