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Published byKrisztián Csonka Modified over 5 years ago
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Bell Ringer What is one way humans are hurting the oceans?
How do you feel now after watching the documentary? Test TOMORROW! Study!
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The Shore
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Continental Margins Continental margin -- part of the continental crust that is actually below sea level Three parts of continental margins: Continental shelf Continental slope Continental rise
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Continental Margins Continental shelf – The shallowest part of the continental margin, extending from the shore out to the sea
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Continental Margins The continental shelf marks the boundaries between territorial (belonging to a country) waters and international waters.
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Continental Margins Continental slopes -- sloping regions beyond the continental shelves where the seafloor drops away quickly Considered the true edge of the continental crust
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Continental Margins Continental rise – deposited sediment that collects at the bottom of the continental slope
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The Shore Shore – where the ocean meets the land
Shaped by waves, tides, and currents both eroding and depositing sediment
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The Shore Beaches – bands of sediment deposited and moved around by waves at the shore Sediment size depends on the energy of the waves striking the coast
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The Shore The type of sediment depends on source material
Example: Hawaii has black sand beaches from black volcanic rocks
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The Shore Southern Florida/Bahamas – white/pink sand from corals and seashells
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Shore Landforms Rocky headlands – points of land sticking out in the ocean caused by the destructive action of breaking waves and the resistance of rocks to erosion
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Shore Landforms Sea stacks/sea arches – form from wave erosion at the rocky headlands
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Shore Landforms Tombolo – sand that forms between, and later connects, the mainland and an island The island then becomes the tip of a peninsula Sha Chau Tombolo near Hong Kong
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Shore Landforms Barrier Islands – Long ridges of sediment separate from mainland Can be several km wide, but are unstable and temporary Example: NC Outer Banks
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The Outer Banks Highway 12 – highway that travels the length of the Outer Banks
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What happens when you build a road on an unstable, temporary barrier island?
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Shoreline Currents Longshore bar – underwater sandbar in the surf zone
Longshore current – current that flows parallel to the shore That feeling of being pulled to the side when you’re in the water
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Shoreline Currents Rip Currents – currents that flow out to sea through gaps in the longshore bar Can reach speeds of several km/hr
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Shoreline Currents If caught in a rip current, you should swim parallel to the shore to get out of the current, rather than trying to swim against it Remember landslide mitigation?
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Protective Structures
Wouldn’t it be awesome to have a house right on the beach? …or would it?
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Protective Structures
Protective structures -- man-made structures are built to prevent beach erosion and destruction of oceanfront properties However, they interfere with natural shoreline processes
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Natural Shoreline Processes
Storms create strong waves that remove beach sand and deposit it in large sandbars offshore. Weeks and months later, the sand is returned to the beach by calm-weather waves
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Natural Shoreline Processes
Natural processes can take too long to protect beach homes, so protective structures are built
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Protective Structures
Seawalls – built along shore to protect beachfront properties Effects – Reflect waves back to the ocean, worsens beach erosion Seawalls in Japan (left) and Galvaston, TX (top)
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Protective Structures
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Protective Structures
Groins – walls built in the water to trap beach sand Effects – traps sand from longshore currents but deprives other nearby beaches of sand
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Protective Structures
Jetties – concrete walls built to protect a harbor entrance from drifting sand Effects – trap sand up the shore, prevent sand from reaching beaches down the shore
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Protective Structures
Beach Nourishment – the process of dredging (removing) sand from another location and dumping it onto an eroding shoreline to widen the existing beach
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Nags Head, NC
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Protective Structures
This doesn’t stop erosion from happening, it just counteracts the process This means that it must be repeated on a regular basis Expensive Example: Nags Head’s beach nourishment budget is $36 million Because sand is being dredged from another location (usually off the continental shelf), it can harm ocean habitats and organisms
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Study Guide Take out all of your notes from unit 6
Complete the study guide If you have head phones, feel free to listen to music
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