Difference between revisions of "Erosion"

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(See also)
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* Articles on different causes of erosion: [[Natural Causes of Coastal Erosion]] and [[Human Causes of Coastal Erosion]]
 
* Articles on different causes of erosion: [[Natural Causes of Coastal Erosion]] and [[Human Causes of Coastal Erosion]]
 
* Articles on the background of erosion: [[Coastal Hydrodynamics And Transport Processes]]
 
* Articles on the background of erosion: [[Coastal Hydrodynamics And Transport Processes]]
* Erosion for different coastal types: [[Accumulation and erosion for different coastal types]], see also [[Classification of Coastlines]] and [[Coastal zone characteristics]].
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* Erosion for different coastal types: [[Accumulation and erosion for different coastal types]], see also [[Coastal zone characteristics]](description of different coastal types),  [[Classification of Coastlines]] and [[Coastal zone characteristics]].
 
* [[Biogeomorphology of aquatic systems]]: Interaction between ecology and geomorphology of a system
 
* [[Biogeomorphology of aquatic systems]]: Interaction between ecology and geomorphology of a system
* [[Coastal zone characteristics]]: description of different coastal types
 
* [[Threats to the coastal zone]]<br>
 
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
 
<references/>
 
<references/>

Revision as of 12:51, 14 December 2007

Definition of Erosion:
The process of wearing away material from the coastal profile due to imbalance in the supply and export of material from a certain section[1].
This is the common definition for Erosion, other definitions can be discussed in the article

Notes

Erosion will take place on the shoreface and on the beach if the export is greater than the supply of material, this means that the level of the seabed and the beach will decrease. The deficit can be due to both cross-shore processes and longshore processes. Erosion due to cross-shore processes mainly occurs during extreme events associated with storm surge, which partially is a reversible process (this is also referred to as dune erosion). The most important reason for long-term erosion is a deficit in the littoral drift budget, which is often caused by a deficit in supply of sand to the area in question (this process is also referred to as structural erosion).

See also

References

  1. Mangor K. (2004). Shoreline Management Guideline. DHI Water and Environment, 294pp.