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12: Coastlines

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    28289
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    Coastlines are the great interface between the 29% of earth’s surface that is land and 71% of earth that is covered by the oceans. Therefore, it is the longest visible boundary on earth. To understand the processes that take place there, we must first consider waves, currents, and tides since they are the main agents that shape shorelines. Most coastal landforms can be attributed to moving sand via longshore drift, longterm rising sea levels, or longterm falling sea levels. Human intervention in beach processes, like jetties, have negative consequences that need to be mitigated.

    • 12.1: Waves and Wave Processes
      Waves are created when wind blows over the surface of the water. Energy is transferred from wind to the water by friction and carried in the upper part of the water by waves.
    • 12.2: Shoreline Features
      Many different erosional and depositional features exist in the high energy of the coast. The coastline includes all parts of the land-sea boundary area that are directly affected by the sea. This includes land far above high tide and well below normal wave base. But the shoreline itself is the direct interface between water and land that migrates with the tides and with deposition and erosion of sediment. So the coastline is an area and the shoreline is a line that moves.
    • 12.3: Current and Tides
      Currents in the ocean are driven by persistent global winds blowing over the surface of the water and water density. They are part of the Earth’s heat engine in which solar energy is absorbed by the ocean water (remember the specific heat of water). The absorbed energy is distributed by ocean currents. The gravitational effects of the sun and moon on the oceans create tides, the rising and lowering of sea level during the day.

    Thumbnail: The Cliffs of Moher, on the Atlantic coast of County Clare in Ireland, looking north from Hag's Head towards O'Brien's tower. (CC-SA-BY; Gdr).


    This page titled 12: Coastlines is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Chris Johnson, Matthew D. Affolter, Paul Inkenbrandt, & Cam Mosher (OpenGeology) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.