Erosion Landforms
Headlands and bays
- Headlands and bays form at discordant coastlines:
- Different types of rock alternate along the cliff face
- The rock runs perpendicular to incoming waves
- Softer rocks, like clays, erode more easily than harder rocks, like chalk
- Bays form where softer rock is prevalent due to wave erosion:
- Bays are curved, partly enclosed inlets of water
- Bays often contain beaches
- Harder, more resistant rocks leave headlands sticking out at sea
Formation of a bay and headland
Formation of a bay and headland
Cliffs and wave-cut platforms
- Cliffs are vast walls of rock found on the coastline
- Constructive waves and softer sediment help form gentle, sloping cliffs
- Destructive waves and resistant rock help form steep cliffs
- Wave erosion processes, like hydraulic action and abrasion, wear away at the base of the cliff
- Wave refraction causes the highest wave energy to focus on the headland
- Waves break near the bottom of the cliff, so wave power is stronger
- Repeated erosion at the base of the cliff forms a wave-cut notch
- This notch widens with further erosion
- Sub-aerial weathering weakens the top of the cliff
- These combined processes cause the top of the cliff to collapse:
- Over time, this process repeats, causing the cliff to retreat
- Backwash brings the cliff material outwards towards the sea, forming a wave-cut platform
Formation of a wave-cut platform
Formation of a wave-cut platform
Cave, arches, stacks and stumps
- Wave and sub-aerial processes wear away at headlands, causing weaknesses
- These weaknesses expand into cracks, eventually growing into larger gaps or caves
- Continuous erosion and weathering from both sides of the headland will form an arch
- With wave erosion at the base and weathering at the top, the arch will give way and collapse
- This leaves behind a long, vertical piece of rock out at sea, called a stack
- Erosion undercuts the base of a stack. Weathering continues from above, until the stack collapses, leaving behind a stump
Formation of a cave, arch stack and stump
The formation process of a cave, arch stack and stump
Examiner Tip
Make sure you know what these landforms look like. Practice drawing these landforms with their labels – you might be asked to draw them or analyse an image in the exam