Managing the whole coast: Integrated Coastal Zone Management

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Coastal landscapes: checklist
Advertisements

Each group has to tell the class about their image. Cover the answers to the questions on each slide in your talk.
Case study: coastal management in Holderness
What should happen to the Holderness coastline? Learning Objective: To practice decision making skills required for the SDME in June 2014.
Teach me, Tell Me How are coasts shaped by physical processes? You have been given a key word with a definition on it. 1.You must quiz one person to define.
Geography at Key Stage 2 Unit 23: Investigating coasts.
How are different coastlines produced by physical processes?
What do all these pictures have in common? 3 answers required.
What affect does this have on people and the environment?
Coastal management Coastal management The four options Fotolia.
Coastal erosion What part of the UK coastline is this?
Unit 1 Topic 5 – Coastal Change and Conflict On your A3 sheet: What key terms can you remember?
 The aim is to protect the coastline by preventing the waves eroding the coastline.
Write Up for CZMU Coastal pressures and Responses in Barbados.
Using last lesson can you answer the following questions about Happisburgh? 1.What is the stretch of coastline Happisburgh is on? 2.Which direction is.
Lesson 5: How does erosion effect people living on the coast?
Coastal Environments How the coast is eroded Landforms and characteristic features Transport and deposition of material Coastal management issues Sustainable.
Objectives To identify and describe the different types of coastal management available. To evaluate the positives and negatives of each option. How do.
Erosion on the Holderness Coast
How can coasts be protected from the effects of natural resources?
Coastal Management Lesson Objective: Understand why methods of engineering to protect the coast have advantages and disadvantages.
Last minute GCSE geography KGGS
Coasts : Coastal Management / Shoreline Management Plans Key Terms : Shoreline Management Plan Sediment Cell No Active Intervention Hold the Line Advance.
Coastal Management- strategies along a stretch of coastline Explain how the coastline is divided up to make management easier. Describe the methods used.
Happisburgh SDME June Question 1 Use Resource 1. (a) Wooden and rock groynes reduce longshore drift. Describe how groynes reduce longshore drift.
TOPIC COASTLINES Jq03NBao.
SEA WALL Description Concrete or rock barrier built at the foot of cliffs or at the top of a beach. Has a curved face to reflect the waves back into the.
Holderness in East Yorkshire is the fastest eroding coast in Europe (c.1m/yr average, but 10m + in some places). Traditionally, management strategies have.
Chapter 2: Coastal Landscapes and Processes NEXT EDEXCEL GCSE GEOGRAPHY A TEACHING AND LEARNING RESOURCES Chapter 2 Coastal Landscapes and Processes Image.
Swanage Bay case study: Causes of coastal recession Odd one out and why: 1.spit, beach, bar 2.Attrition, abrasion, biological 3.Fetch, longshore drift,
What would you do? You are a planning officer responsible for choosing the best coastal defences to use for a number of different places. You need to look.
Coastal Defences Two mothers and two daughters go to a pet store and buy three cats. Each female gets her own cat. How is this possible?
Making decisions about the Holderness coast
Analysing Map and Photo Extracts
Dawlish Warren Explain how coastal management strategies used in your chosen area have taken conflicting views into account.
Coastal management and conflicting views at Dawlish Warren?
Coastal Depositional Landforms
Portfolio work: Management of coastal erosion.
This is the Holderness Coast
Unit 1 Dynamic Planet Revision
Coastal Defence.
Managing Coastlines.
A Case Study of Coastal Erosion
COASTAL MANAGEMENT What is the impact of people on coasts?
Lesson 7: Holderness and Swanage Case Study
Year 8 Summer Exams.
Lesson 6: Coastal Management
Coastal Management Strategies
What effect do destructive waves have on the coastline?
Today’s objectives: MUST Be able to say why coastal defences are needed. LEVEL 4 SHOULD Be able to explain how coastal defences work. LEVEL 5 COULD.
Coastal Mysteries Where were these images taken? What kind of a coastal place is this? Can you match the images to the right map? © EDINA at University.
Why do cliffs collapse? Tuesday, 13 November 2018.
Managing coastal erosion
Coastal defence (management) against flooding and erosion.
What determines whether a particular stretch of coastline is protected or not? Whether land is protected or not comes down to the economic value of the.
Year 8 Revision Winter exam.
Note to teachers This revision session looks at –
Managing the Coastline
PowerPoint 9: Coastal management strategies
What processes cause beaches and spits to form in bays?
Lesson 6: Swanage Case Study
Lesson 7: End of unit test
JUNE 2009 (a) Suggest how geographic information systems (GIS) help us understand the need for different types of coastal management strategies.
People and coastlines.
Do Now Task Can you name any coastal defences that protect the coast against the sea?
AQA Geography (9-1) Paper 1 21st May 2019 (1 hour 30) Areas covered
Erosion on the Holderness Coast
Reconnect – Guess who? (Pairs, Questions, Yes or No answers only)!
Presentation transcript:

Managing the whole coast: Integrated Coastal Zone Management Friday, 16 November 2018

Homework: due next lesson. Complete the exam question.

Large image Last lesson you examined strategies used for managing coastal erosion and the different viewpoints of stakeholders on the coast. You also identified that defending certain sections of coastline can lead to a worsening of erosion further along the coast. This lesson will examine current ways that councils use to manage an entire coastline rather than individual parts of it. The lesson will continue preparation for the Swanage field visit.

Coming up All pupils can explain different choices councils have in deciding coastal management strategies. All pupils will plan how to manage a section of the Norfolk coast. All pupils will have a case study of the Norfolk coast.

Vocabulary Hold the line Advance the line Strategic retreat Do nothing

To start Suggest problems these coastal defences may cause Sea wall Groyne Rip / rap Gabions Revetments Beach replenishment Do nothing

What can the local council do with a coast at risk of erosion? Local councils are responsible for managing the coastline. Most defences are paid for by local councils out of money collected from council tax payers. Some money might be available from the government. The local council has four options when deciding how to manage a coastline that is eroding: Hold the line Advance the line Strategic retreat Do nothing

Task: Match the options with their definitions. Take no action at all and let the coast erode. Hold the line Advance the line Strategic retreat Do nothing Use sea defences to stop erosion and keep the coast line in its current position. Use sea defences to move the coast further out to sea. Gradually let the coast erode and move people away from areas at risk of collapse. Some people may receive compensation for having to leave their homes or businesses.

Match the options with their definitions. The answers Use sea defences to stop erosion and keep the coast line in its current position. Hold the line Advance the line Strategic retreat Do nothing Use sea defences to move the coast further out to sea. Gradually let the coast erode and move people away from areas at risk of collapse. Some people may receive compensation for having to leave their homes or businesses. Take no action at all and let the coast erode.

Task: How would you manage this part of the Norfolk coastline? Work in groups to describe and explain which options you would use along this coastline. The Bacton Gas Terminal is a large gas terminal supplying gas to 30% of the UK as well as large parts of Belgium and the Netherlands Mundesley: a pretty village with a of around 2,500. It is a mixture of good farmland and a popular seaside resort. Walcott: a small village of approximately 600 people. It already has some sea defences. Happisburgh: a small village of approximately 600 people

Task: Using page 86 annotate your diagram to show what Norfolk Council plan to do.

Task: Explain why Norfolk council has decided to manage the coastline in this way. The Bacton Gas Terminal is a large gas terminal supplying gas to 30% of the UK as well as large parts of Belgium and the Netherlands Mundesley: a pretty village with a of around 2,500. It is a mixture of good farmland and a popular seaside resort. Walcott: a small village of approximately 600 people. It already has some sea defences. Happisburgh: a small village of approximately 600 people

Homework: due next lesson. Complete the exam question.

Finally How would the following people feel about the management of the Norfolk coast? Happisburgh’s mayor Norfolk Nature Conservation Trust A fish and chip shop owner in Mundesley Shell: operators of Bacton Gas Terminal You!