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Chapter 20 Coastlines and Ocean Basins. About Coastlines and Ocean Basins Coastal processes are the interaction of the climate system and the solar system. Waves and tides are key processes at the coastline. The ocean basin contains features like mountains, valleys, and volcanoes.
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Chapter 20 Coastlines and Ocean Basins
About Coastlines and Ocean Basins • Coastal processes are the interaction of the climate system and the solar system. • Waves and tides are key processes at the coastline. • The ocean basin contains features like mountains, valleys, and volcanoes.
Lecture Outline • How ocean basins differ from continents • 2. Coastal processes • 3. The shaping of shorelines • 4. Continental margins • 5. Topography of the deep sea floor • 6. Ocean sedimentation
How Ocean Basins Differ • from Continents ● Lack of fragmentation processes ● slow chemical weathering ● Limited tectonic activity ● mid-ocean ridges and subduction zones ● Oceans dominated by volcanism and sedimentation
2. Coastal Processes ● Wave motion – key to shoreline dynamics ● Wind waves: depends on wind speed, duration, and distance
Coastal Processes: Straight Sandy Beach Pea Island, North Carolina
Coastal Processes: Rocky Coastline Mount Desert Island, Maine
Coastal Processes: Wave Erosion Effects Port Campbell, Australia
Coastal Processes: Reef and Beach BEACH REEF southern Florida
2. Coastal Processes ● To describe a wave ● wavelength ●wave height ●period for successive waves
2. Coastal Processes ● The velocity of a wave (V) ● V = L x T ●L = wavelength ●T = period
2. Coastal Processes ● The surf zone ● nearshore area ●waves break (collapse) as they approach the shore ●swash and backwash on shore
2. Coastal Processes: Wave Motion Near Shore
2. Coastal Processes: Wave Motion Near Shore
2. Coastal Processes ● Longshore currents (parallel to shore) ● caused by wave approach at an angle to the shore ●zig-zag path of swash and backwash occurs at the shore ●Rip currents (perpendicular to shore)
2. Coastal Processes: Wave Motion Near Shore
3. The Shaping of Shorelines ● Sand budget of the beach ● incessant movement ●input and output (erosion and sedimentation) ●changing conditions lead to growth or shrinkage
3. The Shaping of Shorelines ● Erosional coastal forms ● sea cliffs and wave-cut terraces ●Depositional coastal forms ●barrier islands and spits
Shorelines: Four Wave-Cut Terraces California
Shorelines: Sand Spit and Barrier Islands Cape Cod, Massachusetts
3. The Shaping of Shorelines ● Shoreline erosion and deposition ● uplift / subsidence ●nature of rocks or sediments ●changes in sea level ● average storm wave heights ● heights of tides
2. Coastal Processes ● The tides: gravitational origin ● solar tides ●lunar tides: spring and neap
2. Coastal Processes ● Tidal currents ● flood tidal current ●ebb tidal current
2. Coastal Processes: Bulging Water of the Tides
2. Coastal Processes: Spring Tides
2. Coastal Processes: Neap Tides
4. Continental Margins ● Continental shelves ● low sloping offshore area ●economically important ●Continental slope and rise ● canyons and submarine fans ● turbidity flows of sediment
Continental Margins: Submarine Canyons SHELF SLOPE RISE offshore New England
5. Topography of the Deep Sea Floor ● How we know about the deep ● Deep Sea Drilling Project ●Ocean Drilling Program ●ship-towed instruments ● deep-diving submarines ● satellite charting of seafloor
5. Topography of the Deep Sea Floor ● Important features ● mid-ocean ridges ●volcanic tracks of hot spots ●deep sea trenches ● island arcs ● continental margins
6. Ocean Sedimentation ● Continental shelf sedimentation ● clastics from land ● biochemical ● Deep-sea sedimentation ● pelagic sediments and foraminiferal oozes ● windblown silt and clay ● siliceous oozes (silica plankton)
Oceanic Sediments: Oceanic Ooze Made of Planktonic Organisms
6. Ocean Sedimentation: Chemical Weathering and Depth
Chapter 21 Glaciers: The Work of Ice
About Glaciers and the Work of Ice • Glacial erosion creates an enormous amount of sedimentary debris. • Ice covers only 10% of Earth now, but 21,000 years ago, the coverage was 30%. • The landscapes of vast areas of many continents have been sculpted by the flow of ice in glaciers.
Lecture Outline • Ice as a rock • 2. How glaciers form • 3. How glaciers move • 4. Glacial landscapes • 5. Glacial cycles and climate change
1. Ice as a Rock ● Could be viewed as any kind of rock ● igneous – formed from a liquid ● sedimentary – formed in layers ● metamorphic – transformed by pressure and recrystallization
1. Ice as a Rock ● Formation of glacial ice ● falls as snow and ice ● recrystallizes over time to ice ● with pressure of overlying ice, ice under pressure starts to flow like a very viscous fluid
1. Ice as a Rock ● Peculiar properties of the rock ice ● freezes at very low temperature compared to other rocks ● ice is less dense than the liquid it comes from (water)
1. Ice as a Rock ● Types of glaciers ● valley glaciers (alpine glaciers) ● continental glaciers (ice sheets) ● ice shelves and ice caps
Ice as a Rock: A Valley Glacier near Juneau, Alaska
Ice as a Rock: The Ice Cap of Greenland
2. How Glaciers Form ● Basic ingredients: cold and snow ● accumulation and ablation ● Glacial movement (glacial budget) ● advance or recession
How Glaciers Form: The Evolution of Snow into Glacial Ice