Topic Summaries

Geological landforms resulting from erosion

IGCSE > Geography > CIE > IGCSE Geography Topic Summaries > Coastal landform processes > Geological landforms resulting from erosion
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Water supply

  • Headlands and bays
    • Found on discordant coastlines, where alternating bands of hard and soft rock run perpendicular to the coast. 
    • Hard rock (e.g. limestone, granite) resists erosion, forming headlands that protrudes into the sea. 
    • Soft rock (e.g. clay, sand) erodes more easily, forming bays. 
    • Headlands are exposed to high-energy waves, forming cliffs, wave-cut platforms, and stacks.
    • Bays are sheltered by headlands, experience low-energy waves, leading to deposition and the formation of beaches.

  • Cliffs and wave-cut platforms 
    • Erosion at the base: hydraulic action and abrasion erode the base of a cliff, creating a wave-cut notch
    • Collapse: the overhanging cliff becomes unstable and collapses due to gravity (e.g. rockfall or landslide). 
    • Retreat: the cliff face retreats inland, leaving behind a wave-cut platform (a flat, rocky area exposed at low tide). 
    • Smoothing: the wave-cut platform is smoothed over time by abrasion as pebbles grind against it. 

  • Caves, arches, stacks, and stumps: 
    • Cracks and joints: the sea erodes weaknesses in the rock (e.g. joints, cracks, or faults) through hydraulic action, wave pounding, abrasion, and solution. 
    • Cave: over time, the cracks expand and develops into a cave. 
    • Arch: if the cave continues to erode through a headland, it forms an arch. 
    • Stack: the roof of the arch collapses due to weathering and wave energy, leaving a stack (a tall column of rock). 
    • Stump: the stack is further eroded by waves, eventually collapsing to form a stump, which is visible at low tide.

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