3.8 Deposition by Waves

Which came first: erosion or deposition?

Both erosion and deposition are seen in this photo. The beach sands were deposited butwaves are now eroding them away. At the shore, there’s always a battle between the twotypes of forces. What happens when deposition is greater than erosion? What happens when erosion is greater than deposition?

Wave Deposition

The transport of sediments by longshore currents is called longshore drift . Longshore drift is created in this way: Sediment is moved up the beach by an incoming wave. The wave approaches at an angle to the shore. Water then moves straight offshore. The sediment moves straight down the beach with it. The sediment is again picked up by a wave that is coming in at an angle. So longshore drift moves sediment along the shore. This zig-zag motion is pictured below ( Figure below ) and can also be seen at the link below.

Longshore drift carries particles of sand and rock down a coastline.

Landforms Deposited by Waves

Longshore drift continually moves sand along the shore. Deposition occurs where the watermotion slows. The smallest particles, such as silt and clay, are deposited away from shore. This is where the water is calmer. Larger particles are deposited onshore. This is where wavesand other motions are strongest.

In relatively quiet areas along a shore, waves deposit sand. Sand forms a beach Figurebelow ).

Manhattan Beach in Southern California has a pier coming off of a sandy beach.

Waves also move sand from the beaches on shore to bars of sand offshore as the seasonschange. In the summer, waves have lower energy so they bring sand up onto the beach. In the winter, higher energy waves bring the sand back offshore.

Examples of features formed by wave-deposited sand.

spit is a ridge of sand that extends away from the shore. The end of the spit may hook around toward the quieter waters close to shore.

Waves may also deposit sediments to form sandbars and barrier islands . Pictured below are examples of these landforms ( Figure below ); also, an example of all the different landforms waves create ( Figure above ).

A barrier island is a long strip of sand. The sand naturally moves in the local currents. People try to build on barrier islands.

In its natural state, a barrier island acts as the first line of defense against storms such ashurricanes. A natural barrier island is a vegetated sandy areas in which sand can move. When barrier islands are developed, hurricanes damage houses and businesses. A large hurricane brings massive problems to the urbanized area.

Vocabulary

  • barrier island : Long, narrow island composed of sand; nature’s first line of defense against storms.
  • beach : Sediments on a shore.
  • longshore drift : Movement of sand along a shoreline.
  • spit : Long, narrow bar of sand that forms as waves transport sand along shore.

Summary

  • The shore may have a lot of sediment washed from land or eroded from cliffs. The sediment is transported by currents.
  • Transported sand will eventually be deposited on beaches, spits, or barrier islands.

Practice

Use the resource below to answer the questions that follow.

  1. What is a spit?
  2. How do spits form?
  3. Where was the castle originally relative to the sea? Where is it now relative to the sea?
  4. What forms behind a spit?

Review

  1. What processes cause spits and barrier islands to form?
  2. What is longshore drift?
  3. Describe how sediment moves along the shore.
  4. What function does a barrier island in its natural state serve?

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