Wave erosion landforms are created through the repetitive action of waves breaking against the coastline and wearing away the rock or sediment. Over time, this erosion carves out features such as sea cliffs, sea caves, sea stacks, and wave-cut platforms. The strength and frequency of the waves, as well as the type of rock or sediment present, all contribute to the formation of these landforms.
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Coasts have many different features, such as caves and cliffs, beaches and mudflats. Tides, waves, and water currents (flow) shape the land to form these coastal features. Some coasts are also changed by the flow of glaciers, which are huge rivers of ice, and lava from volcanoes. Hope this helped!
Plateau. Valley. Dune.
Two landforms associated with wave action are sea cliffs, which are steep rock faces created by the constant pounding of waves against the coastline, and sea caves, which are hollowed-out caves formed by the erosion of rock by wave action.
Wave erosion is a specific type of coastal erosion caused by the action of waves on the coastline. Coastal erosion, on the other hand, encompasses a broader range of processes that result in the gradual wearing away of coastal landforms, including wave erosion, weathering, and other factors.
Three landforms shaped by weathering and erosion are canyons, arches, and hoodoos. Canyons form through the erosion of rock by rivers, arches are created by the gradual wearing away of softer rock underneath harder layers, and hoodoos are tall, thin spires of rock formed through erosion of sedimentary rock layers.