1 / 49

Coastal Classification

Coastal Classification. By its very nature, the coast is an incredibly complex and diverse environment, one that may defy organization into neat compartments. Nevertheless, the quest for understanding how shorelines form and

Download Presentation

Coastal Classification

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Coastal Classification By its very nature, the coast is an incredibly complex and diverse environment, one that may defy organization into neat compartments. Nevertheless, the quest for understanding how shorelines form and how human activities affect these processes has led the creation of classification schemes. Most group coastal areas into classes that have similar features because of having developed in similar geological and environmental settings. This is called the “geologic framework” and It is the motivating ideal behind the USGS Marine and Coastal Geology Program

  2. Headlands, Embayments, Tombolos, Channel Mouths, Beaches, Tidal Flats, Estuaries

  3. Shepard’s 1973 Classification Divides the world’s coasts into primary coasts – formed mostly by non-marine agents - and secondary coasts - shaped primarily by marine processes. • Further subdivisions occur according to which specific agent, • terrestrial or marine, had the greatest influence • on coastal development. • Although gradational shore types exist, which are difficult • to classify, most coasts show only one dominant influence.

  4. Primary coast – nonmarine agent Secondary coast – marine agent

  5. Primary CoastsLand Erosion Coasts • Land erosion coastsShaped by subaerial erosion and partly drowned by postglacial rise of sea level. • Ria Coasts (Chesapeake Bay) Dendritic (flooded drainage in horizontal beds) Trellis (glacial erosion, fjords, Gulf St. Lawrence) • Drowned Karst Topography (northwest Florida)

  6. Land Erosion Coast – Ria Coast

  7. Florida, flooded karst erosion due to dissolution flooded by sea-level rise

  8. Glacier Bay, flooded fjord erosion by glaciation flooded by sea-level rise

  9. Primary CoastsSubaerial Deposition Coasts • River deposition coasts • Deltaic coasts (Mississippi Delta) • Compound delta coasts (north slope - Pt. Barrow to MacKenzie River) • Compound alluvial fan (straightened by erosion) • Glacial deposition coasts (Cape Cod) • Wind deposition coasts (Sleeping Bear St. Park) • Landslide coasts (Martinique)

  10. Cape Cod region glacial deposition

  11. Mississippi delta subaerial deposition

  12. Sleeping Bear, Michigan subaerial deposition, dune

  13. Primary CoastsVolcanic Coasts • Lava Flow Coasts(Big Island) • Tephra Coasts • Volcanic Collapse Coasts (Hanauma Bay)

  14. Primary Volcanic Coast

  15. Collapsed Volcanic Coast

  16. Pyroclastic surge Montserrat

  17. Primary CoastsShaped by Diastrophic Movements Diastrophism – movement of the crust • Fault Coasts • Fold Coasts • Sedimentary Extrusions (salt domes, mud lumps, Red Sea)

  18. Primary CoastsIce Coasts • Glacial Ice and Sea Ice

  19. Primary Ice Coast Collapsing Larson B ice shelf

  20. Secondary CoastsWave Erosion Coasts • Wave-straightened cliffs • Made irregular by wave erosion

  21. Wave straightened cliffs

  22. Maui lava flows – irregular erosion resistance

  23. Secondary CoastsMarine Deposition Coasts • Barrier Coasts • Cuspate forelands • Beach Plains • Mud Flats/Salt Marshes

  24. Primary Marine Deposition Cuspate Foreland Coast

  25. Holocene beach Strand plain

  26. Secondary CoastsCoasts Built by Organisms • Coral Reef Coast • Serpulid Reef Coast • Oyster Reef Coast • Mangrove Coast • Marsh Grass Coast

  27. Other Classification Schemes • Emergent Coasts • Relative sea level is falling • Tectonics or isostasy responsible • for most types • Submergent Coasts • Relative sea level is rising • Estuaries formed in drowned • river mouths • Depositional Coasts • Wide sandy beaches, stream • deltas, overabundance of sediment • Erosional Coasts • Irregular coastline, narrow • beaches, eroding headlands • Passive Margin Coasts • Broad continental shelf • Plate trailing edge • Convergent Coasts • Sea Cliffs common, narrow • continental shelf, relatively straight • and mountainous

  28. Submergent Coast

  29. Emergent Coast

  30. Depositional Coast – Mississippi River Delta

  31. Erosional Coast – “12 Apostles”

  32. Convergent Coast –

  33. Trailing Coast –

  34. Delta Classification -tide dominated -river dominated -wave dominated

  35. Shorelines straighten with time

More Related