Deck 15: Shorelines and Shoreline Processes

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Question
Describe how a coral atoll forms.
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Question
Briefly explain what the effects of rising sea level are on the barrier islands along the United States coastlines and why coastal communities are concerned.
Question
What causes a wave to break when it reaches shore?
Question
Why must elected officials and city planners of coastal communities understand the geologic processes of shorelines?
Question
What options do geologists and engineers have in combating the effects of rising sea level?
Question
What is a beach, and what are the component parts of a beach?
Question
Describe the way a wave moves and what wave speed measures.
Question
What are two ways (one natural and one human-induced) in which the sediment budget of a coastline can become negative?
Question
How does the Moon generate tides? Why are there generally two high tides and two low tides a day?
Question
What are winter and summer beaches? How can the same beach have two such different seasonal profiles?
Question
In most locations ocean water salinity is in dynamic equilibrium, inputs equal outputs. What does this mean and what are the inputs and outputs for dissolved solids in seawater?
Question
What are barrier islands, and where do they form? How does the sand migrate on barrier islands?
Question
What caused the bulk of the damage by Hurricane Katrina to the city of New Orleans? Why was New Orleans so vulnerable?
Question
Describe how waves are generated.
Question
How do rip currents form, and what should you do if you are caught in one?
Question
What causes tides? Which of these is stronger, and why?
Question
What are longshore currents, and how do they form? Why are they important to shoreline processes?
Question
Why do waves bend or refract as they approach shorelines?
Question
Outline and describe factors that are responsible for global surface circulation patterns. Where are the cold and warm water currents and how do they moderate Earth's temperature?
Question
What are spring tides and neap tides, and what causes them?
Question
How are sea cliffs eroded?
Question
Describe how a coast can become emergent.
Question
Methane hydrates could provide a lot of energy for us to use. Outline the reasons that these resources are not yet being used.
Question
What are the primary agents of sediment transport and deposition along shorelines?
Question
How would a country, such as Bangladesh, be affected by a 2 meter rise in sea level?
Question
What is the most important agent for modifying the equilibrium profile of beaches?
Question
What path do water particles in a wave ideally follow?
Question
What is a wave-cut platform, and how does one develop?
Question
What is the cause of rising sea level?
Question
What is the nearshore sediment budget?
Question
Why do wave sizes in ponds and lakes have less magnitude than those in oceans?
Question
In what direction do longshore currents flow?
Question
What characteristics along a seacoast indicate that erosion predominates over deposition?
Question
How does the budget or volume of sand on a given beach change through the year?
Question
Give a possible reason why beach residents might construct a groin on a beach. What is a probable negative effect of such a construction?
Question
How do marine terraces form?
Question
Briefly explain how sea level could fall in one region while it is generally rising elsewhere.
Question
What are the two factors that control the absolute rate of sea level rise in a particular shoreline?
Question
Define the photic and aphotic zones in the ocean.
Question
How do shoreline processes tend to straighten an initially irregular shoreline?
Question
Regularly sized waves with long, rounded crests are known as ____________________.
Question
Large-scale surface water circulation systems in the oceans are known as ____________________.
Question
High water that occurs with the eye of a storm coupled with storm waves reaching a shoreline is called ____________________.
Question
The highest part of a wave is known as its ____________________, and the lowest part is its ____________________. The wave ____________________ is the difference between these two points.
Question
A(n) ____________________ is the location where land meets the sea; a(n) ____________________ is that plus the land both seaward and landward of it.
Question
The distance from one crest (or trough) to the next in a wave is the ____________________.
Question
The presidential proclamation in the United States claims sovereign rights over an area extending 200 nautical miles seaward is _________________________.
Question
Tidal ranges are lowest where the sea bottom is ____________________ in slope and the inlet is ____________________ in width, and are highest where the slope is ____________________ in slope and the inlet is ____________________ in width.
Question
Spits and baymouth bars are formed due to ____________________ currents.
Question
Orbiting molecules of water in a wave touch the sea or lake floor at the depth of the ____________________.
Question
If hydraulic action and abrasion undercut headlands, structures known as ____________________ may form. When these join, they form a(n) ____________________, which might later collapse to give rise to a(n) ____________________.
Question
The velocity of a wave is calculated as the ____________________ divided by the ____________________.
Question
The bending of waves toward shore as they approach from an oblique angle is called wave ____________________.
Question
The average salinity of seawater can be expressed as ____________________ grams per kilogram of seawater, ____________________ parts per thousand, and ____________________ percent.
Question
A structure built perpendicular to shore to enlarge a beach or prevent erosion is a(n) ____________________.
Question
The two important types of nearshore currents are ____________________ currents and ____________________ currents.
Question
Energy is transferred from wind to water to generate waves by ____________________.
Question
The transfer of water from depth to the surface is known as ____________________. The transfer of water in the opposite direction is known as ____________________.
Question
Tides that occur when the Sun and Moon are at right angles to one another and have wave-generating abilities that cancel each other out are ____________________ tides.
Question
The rising tide is also known as the ____________________ tide. The falling tide is known as the ____________________ tide.
Question
Wave-cut platforms along northern coastlines of North America and the Great Lakes are exposed as the result of:

A) rising sea level.
B) sediment erosion.
C) sediment deposition.
D) isostatic rebound.
E) falling sea level.
Question
A beach with a wide berm, a gentle slope, and a smooth offshore profile is a:

A) summer beach.
B) winter beach.
C) high-energy beach.
D) tide-dominated beach.
E) sediment-poor beach.
Question
Spring tides are tides:

A) that result from the combined gravitational force of the aligned Moon and Sun.
B) that occur when the Sun and Moon are disposed at right angles to one another.
C) that occur in springtime when floodwaters are high.
D) with a relatively small range.
E) that are high only once per day.
Question
Sea level could change relative to a shoreline due to:

A) uplift of coastal regions.
B) subsidence of coastal regions.
C) rising sea level.
D) receding sea level.
E) all of the above
Question
The diameter of a water molecule orbit increases with depth until the wave reaches the seafloor.
Question
A beach with a small berm, coarser sediment, and offshore sand bars is a:

A) summer beach.
B) winter beach.
C) high-energy beach.
D) tide-dominated beach.
E) sediment-poor beach.
Question
Rip currents commonly develop in regions where wave heights are highest.
Question
A spit that connects an island to the mainland is a:

A) hook.
B) tombolo.
C) barrier island.
D) beach.
E) baymouth bar.
Question
A deposit of unconsolidated sediment that extends landward from low tide to a change in topography or to where permanent vegetation begins is a:

A) spit.
B) tombolo.
C) barrier island.
D) beach.
E) baymouth bar.
Question
Water in waves is displaced from the circular orbits when:

A) waves enter progressively shallower water.
B) seas become swells.
C) waves reach great heights.
D) waves reach great lengths.
E) winds reach a critical velocity.
Question
Narrow surface currents that flow in the same general direction as the approaching waves are:

A) rip currents.
B) nearshore currents.
C) longshore currents.
D) upwelling currents.
E) refraction currents.
Question
In the open ocean salinity ranges from 32 to 37%.
Question
Coriolis effect is the deflection of freely moving bodies, such as air or water molecules, due to Earth's rotation.
Question
The distance wave-producing winds blow over a continuous body of water is the:

A) wavelength.
B) trough.
C) height.
D) fetch.
E) velocity.
Question
Waves are oscillations of the water surface.
Question
The tiny shells of marine organisms form marine sediments called:

A) calcite
B) reefite
C) pelagic clay
D) ooze
Question
A coast that is straight and has marine terraces is a(n):

A) depositional coast.
B) erosional coast.
C) submergent coast.
D) emergent coast.
E) none of the above
Question
Currents that form from the collective movement of wave water refracted off a shoreline are:

A) rip currents.
B) nearshore currents.
C) longshore currents.
D) upwelling currents.
E) refraction currents.
Question
Individual sand grains move along a beach:

A) straight in the direction of the longshore current.
B) straight offshore.
C) in circles up and down the beach face but not horizontally down the beach.
D) in a zigzag pattern in the direction of longshore currents.
E) only during storms.
Question
Vertical ocean circulation is the result of differences in what between adjacent water masses?

A) Temperature
B) Salinity
C) Coriolis effect
D) temperature and salinity
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Deck 15: Shorelines and Shoreline Processes
1
Describe how a coral atoll forms.
A fringing coral reef forms around an island, usually a volcano. As the oceanic plate moves away from the spreading center or volcanic hotspot, the plate cools, it becomes denser, and subsequently, becomes less buoyant and sinks. The coral continues to grow upward but the island erodes and disappears below the surface resulting in the coral remaining on the surface as an atoll.
2
Briefly explain what the effects of rising sea level are on the barrier islands along the United States coastlines and why coastal communities are concerned.
Rising sea levels cause erosion, shoreward migration of barrier islands, and even their submergence. This is of concern because so many expensive beachfront properties are located on barrier islands and since barrier islands protect the mainland from erosion and flooding, and constitute an important part of the natural coastal wetland habitat.
3
What causes a wave to break when it reaches shore?
As waves enter shallow water, the broad waves of deep water become sharp-crested. This transformation begins at wave base, one-half the wavelength. The wave touches the seafloor, and the orbital motion at the bottom of the wave is disrupted. The wave is pushed upward by the sea bottom and becomes oversteepened. Eventually the crest plunges forward as a breaker.
4
Why must elected officials and city planners of coastal communities understand the geologic processes of shorelines?
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5
What options do geologists and engineers have in combating the effects of rising sea level?
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6
What is a beach, and what are the component parts of a beach?
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7
Describe the way a wave moves and what wave speed measures.
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8
What are two ways (one natural and one human-induced) in which the sediment budget of a coastline can become negative?
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9
How does the Moon generate tides? Why are there generally two high tides and two low tides a day?
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10
What are winter and summer beaches? How can the same beach have two such different seasonal profiles?
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11
In most locations ocean water salinity is in dynamic equilibrium, inputs equal outputs. What does this mean and what are the inputs and outputs for dissolved solids in seawater?
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12
What are barrier islands, and where do they form? How does the sand migrate on barrier islands?
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13
What caused the bulk of the damage by Hurricane Katrina to the city of New Orleans? Why was New Orleans so vulnerable?
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14
Describe how waves are generated.
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15
How do rip currents form, and what should you do if you are caught in one?
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16
What causes tides? Which of these is stronger, and why?
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17
What are longshore currents, and how do they form? Why are they important to shoreline processes?
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18
Why do waves bend or refract as they approach shorelines?
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19
Outline and describe factors that are responsible for global surface circulation patterns. Where are the cold and warm water currents and how do they moderate Earth's temperature?
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20
What are spring tides and neap tides, and what causes them?
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21
How are sea cliffs eroded?
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22
Describe how a coast can become emergent.
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23
Methane hydrates could provide a lot of energy for us to use. Outline the reasons that these resources are not yet being used.
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24
What are the primary agents of sediment transport and deposition along shorelines?
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25
How would a country, such as Bangladesh, be affected by a 2 meter rise in sea level?
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26
What is the most important agent for modifying the equilibrium profile of beaches?
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27
What path do water particles in a wave ideally follow?
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28
What is a wave-cut platform, and how does one develop?
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29
What is the cause of rising sea level?
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30
What is the nearshore sediment budget?
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31
Why do wave sizes in ponds and lakes have less magnitude than those in oceans?
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32
In what direction do longshore currents flow?
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33
What characteristics along a seacoast indicate that erosion predominates over deposition?
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34
How does the budget or volume of sand on a given beach change through the year?
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35
Give a possible reason why beach residents might construct a groin on a beach. What is a probable negative effect of such a construction?
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36
How do marine terraces form?
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37
Briefly explain how sea level could fall in one region while it is generally rising elsewhere.
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38
What are the two factors that control the absolute rate of sea level rise in a particular shoreline?
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39
Define the photic and aphotic zones in the ocean.
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40
How do shoreline processes tend to straighten an initially irregular shoreline?
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41
Regularly sized waves with long, rounded crests are known as ____________________.
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42
Large-scale surface water circulation systems in the oceans are known as ____________________.
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43
High water that occurs with the eye of a storm coupled with storm waves reaching a shoreline is called ____________________.
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44
The highest part of a wave is known as its ____________________, and the lowest part is its ____________________. The wave ____________________ is the difference between these two points.
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45
A(n) ____________________ is the location where land meets the sea; a(n) ____________________ is that plus the land both seaward and landward of it.
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46
The distance from one crest (or trough) to the next in a wave is the ____________________.
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47
The presidential proclamation in the United States claims sovereign rights over an area extending 200 nautical miles seaward is _________________________.
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48
Tidal ranges are lowest where the sea bottom is ____________________ in slope and the inlet is ____________________ in width, and are highest where the slope is ____________________ in slope and the inlet is ____________________ in width.
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49
Spits and baymouth bars are formed due to ____________________ currents.
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50
Orbiting molecules of water in a wave touch the sea or lake floor at the depth of the ____________________.
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51
If hydraulic action and abrasion undercut headlands, structures known as ____________________ may form. When these join, they form a(n) ____________________, which might later collapse to give rise to a(n) ____________________.
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52
The velocity of a wave is calculated as the ____________________ divided by the ____________________.
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53
The bending of waves toward shore as they approach from an oblique angle is called wave ____________________.
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54
The average salinity of seawater can be expressed as ____________________ grams per kilogram of seawater, ____________________ parts per thousand, and ____________________ percent.
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55
A structure built perpendicular to shore to enlarge a beach or prevent erosion is a(n) ____________________.
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56
The two important types of nearshore currents are ____________________ currents and ____________________ currents.
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57
Energy is transferred from wind to water to generate waves by ____________________.
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58
The transfer of water from depth to the surface is known as ____________________. The transfer of water in the opposite direction is known as ____________________.
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59
Tides that occur when the Sun and Moon are at right angles to one another and have wave-generating abilities that cancel each other out are ____________________ tides.
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60
The rising tide is also known as the ____________________ tide. The falling tide is known as the ____________________ tide.
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61
Wave-cut platforms along northern coastlines of North America and the Great Lakes are exposed as the result of:

A) rising sea level.
B) sediment erosion.
C) sediment deposition.
D) isostatic rebound.
E) falling sea level.
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Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
62
A beach with a wide berm, a gentle slope, and a smooth offshore profile is a:

A) summer beach.
B) winter beach.
C) high-energy beach.
D) tide-dominated beach.
E) sediment-poor beach.
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Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
63
Spring tides are tides:

A) that result from the combined gravitational force of the aligned Moon and Sun.
B) that occur when the Sun and Moon are disposed at right angles to one another.
C) that occur in springtime when floodwaters are high.
D) with a relatively small range.
E) that are high only once per day.
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Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
64
Sea level could change relative to a shoreline due to:

A) uplift of coastal regions.
B) subsidence of coastal regions.
C) rising sea level.
D) receding sea level.
E) all of the above
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k this deck
65
The diameter of a water molecule orbit increases with depth until the wave reaches the seafloor.
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k this deck
66
A beach with a small berm, coarser sediment, and offshore sand bars is a:

A) summer beach.
B) winter beach.
C) high-energy beach.
D) tide-dominated beach.
E) sediment-poor beach.
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Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
67
Rip currents commonly develop in regions where wave heights are highest.
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k this deck
68
A spit that connects an island to the mainland is a:

A) hook.
B) tombolo.
C) barrier island.
D) beach.
E) baymouth bar.
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Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
69
A deposit of unconsolidated sediment that extends landward from low tide to a change in topography or to where permanent vegetation begins is a:

A) spit.
B) tombolo.
C) barrier island.
D) beach.
E) baymouth bar.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
70
Water in waves is displaced from the circular orbits when:

A) waves enter progressively shallower water.
B) seas become swells.
C) waves reach great heights.
D) waves reach great lengths.
E) winds reach a critical velocity.
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Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
71
Narrow surface currents that flow in the same general direction as the approaching waves are:

A) rip currents.
B) nearshore currents.
C) longshore currents.
D) upwelling currents.
E) refraction currents.
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k this deck
72
In the open ocean salinity ranges from 32 to 37%.
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73
Coriolis effect is the deflection of freely moving bodies, such as air or water molecules, due to Earth's rotation.
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Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
74
The distance wave-producing winds blow over a continuous body of water is the:

A) wavelength.
B) trough.
C) height.
D) fetch.
E) velocity.
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Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
75
Waves are oscillations of the water surface.
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Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
76
The tiny shells of marine organisms form marine sediments called:

A) calcite
B) reefite
C) pelagic clay
D) ooze
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Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
77
A coast that is straight and has marine terraces is a(n):

A) depositional coast.
B) erosional coast.
C) submergent coast.
D) emergent coast.
E) none of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
78
Currents that form from the collective movement of wave water refracted off a shoreline are:

A) rip currents.
B) nearshore currents.
C) longshore currents.
D) upwelling currents.
E) refraction currents.
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Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
79
Individual sand grains move along a beach:

A) straight in the direction of the longshore current.
B) straight offshore.
C) in circles up and down the beach face but not horizontally down the beach.
D) in a zigzag pattern in the direction of longshore currents.
E) only during storms.
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80
Vertical ocean circulation is the result of differences in what between adjacent water masses?

A) Temperature
B) Salinity
C) Coriolis effect
D) temperature and salinity
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