Sea Cave
No, the Great Wave off Kanagawa by the artist Hokusai is not a lineart picture. It is a wood block print and features plenty of color fill.
Wave Rock, a granite cliff, is 15 meters high and 110 meters long. Its rounded shape has been caused by weathering and water erosion which has undercut the base and left a rounded overhang. It is believed that the Aborigines, who were the first to inhabit the area, gave the district a wide berth during the past century and a half for fear of the spirit of Mulka.
Longitudinal Wave
Wave is 'nami' in Japanese, as in 'tsunami' (tidal wave).
Longitudinal wave
skin, cells, blood, organ
waves slow down as they approach the shoreline!
Me ;)
wind that results from summer hurricanes and severe winter storms makes large waves that cause dramatic shoreline erosion.
The crest, wavelength, trough, and amplitude.
beach erosion is caused by the movement of ocean currents along the shoreline, and by wave action. As an ocean current moves parallel to the shore, it will carry away sediment. Wave action also does this, kind of similarly to currents.
Coastal erosion is when land is starting to wash away. This is when water wave began to wash away the beaches.
I'm not a scientist but I would say the greater the force, the greater the erosion. A larger wave has more mass, and would exert more force on what it hits. The greater force would have greater potential for knocking particles loose from what it hits - erosion. The speed of the wave would have a similar effect - greater speed equals greater fore and greater erosion.
headlands and bays tombolos spits bars
WAVE-CUT CLIFF, WAVE-CUT TERRACE or PLATFORM, SEA NOTCH, SEA CAVES, SEA ARCH, AND SEA STACK!
erosion. deposition. transportation. hydraulic action erosion (wave erosion). abrasion erosion (wave erosion).
Wave activity moves sediment, sand and erodes shorelines. The shoreline is a transitional zone for the distribution of sediments between marine and continental environment. Is really where land, air and sea meet. Human activity also changes the shape of shoreline by using hard stabilization or constructing buildings. The slowest process affects shoreline shapes as the melting of glaciers did millions of years ago, erosion will eat away slowly and constantly reshape the coast line.