2.1.6

Types of Waves

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Types of Wave

Constructive and destructive waves are the two main types of wave. The characteristics of these waves are described below:

Illustrative background for What are constructive waves?Illustrative background for What are constructive waves? ?? "content

What are constructive waves?

  • Constructive waves are not very tall.
  • When the sea's waves are constructive, we say that the sea is calm.
  • Constructive waves have a longer wavelength than destructive waves which means individual waves are spread quite far apart.
  • Constructive waves have a low frequency (about 7-10 waves arrive at the beach each minute).
  • Constructive waves deposit material onto coastlines because they have strong swash and weak backwash. This means that more material is deposited onto the beach than the weak backwash can drag material away.
Illustrative background for What are destructive waves?Illustrative background for What are destructive waves? ?? "content

What are destructive waves?

  • Destructive waves are taller and more frequent than constructive waves.
  • Destructive waves have a high frequency. They have around 10-15 waves per minute.
  • Destructive waves cause most of the erosion of coastlines.
  • Destructive waves have a stronger backwash than swash, meaning they drag more material away from the coastline than is deposited on the shore.
Illustrative background for What is deposition?Illustrative background for What is deposition? ?? "content

What is deposition?

  • Deposition describes the sea putting (depositing) solid material from the sea onto the land on the coastline.
  • Constructive waves deposit material on coastlines because their swash depositing things on the beach is stronger than their backwash dragging things from the beach.
Illustrative background for How do destructive waves erode the coast?Illustrative background for How do destructive waves erode the coast? ?? "content

How do destructive waves erode the coast?

  • Destructive waves erode the coast using 3 erosional processes:
    • Hydraulic power: The force of wave actually breaks the rock itself.
    • Abrasion: The material and rock being carried by the sea damages the coastal rock.
    • Attrition: The bedload collides with itself, eroding it.

Jump to other topics

1Paper 1 - Changing River Environnments

2Paper 1 - Changing Coastal Environments

3Paper 1 - Changing Ecosystems

4Paper 1 - Tectonic Hazards

5Paper 1 - Climate Change

6Paper 2 - Changing Populations

7Paper 2 - Changing Towns & Cities

8Paper 2 - Development

9Paper 2 - Changing Economies

10Paper 2 - Resource Provision

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