2b.5A Flashcards
What is sediment transportation influenced by
Sediment transportation is influenced by the angle of wave attack, tides and currents and the process of longshore drift
State 4 types of transportation
Traction, saltation, suspension, solution
Describe traction
Where large, heavy load items are rolled along the sea bed,
e.g. boulders, cobbles and pebbles
Describe Saltation
1) Where lighter sediment bounces along
2) Sand particles are usually transported this way
3) Sand can be saltated by wind as well as waves
+ On a dry, windy day, there can be a layer of saltating sand 2-10 cm above the beach
Describe suspension
1) Where very light sediment is carried aloft within a body of water or air
2) E.g. silt or clay particles
3) Suspended clay particles, give the sea a cloudy, muddy brown colour on soft-rock coasts, e.g. Holderness
Describe solution
Where sediment is carried dissolved within the water
How does the angle of attack affect sediment transportation
- This is the main determinant of the direction of sediment transport (in the foreshore zone).
- Where the wind is blowing directly onshore, the incoming swash transports the material direction up the beach at 90’ to the coastline.
- Backwash then transports sediment perpendicularly back down to the beach to its original starting position.
- Sediment is moved up and down the beach, but there is no net lateral movement
How does the tides affect sediment transportation
Tides are changes in sea level produced by the gravitational pull of the moon and the Sun.
- The incoming and ebbing tide can create tidal currents in the nearshore and offshore zones that transport sediment
How does the current affect sediment transportation
- This is the flow of water in a particular direction, and they can transport sediment in the nearshore and offshore zones.
- They can be driven by winds, or initiated by differences in water density, temperature or salinity.
How do currents transport sediment over a variety of spatial and temporal scales:
- The global thermohaline circulation connects four oceans and takes 500 years for one complete circuit.
- Rip currents on the beach transport sediment a few metres out to sea for a few hours when the wind is blowing direcly onshore with the right strength
Describe LSD
- Incoming swash transports sediment up the beach at an angle (movement contains an up-beach component and a lateral component)
- Gravitational backwash then transports sediment back down the beach at 90’ to the coastline.
- A sediment particle comes to rest some distance along the beach from the original starting point due to net lateral movement.
- Particle moves in a zig-zag fashion along the beach with each incoming wave.
What wave angle gives the strongest LSD movement
A wave angle 30