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Key Words:
Term | Definition |
---|---|
Eustatic Movement | A change in sea level |
Isostatic Uplift/Adjustment | The crust of the Earth lifting up |
Incised | To cut deeper |
Rejuvenation | To make young again |
River's Base Level | Lowest level that a river/stream can erode it's channel to |
Peneplains | Areas of flat land |
Geography
What is Isostasy and Base Level?
Adjustments to Base Level: Evidence of rejuvenation
Cyclic Landscape Development and Peneplains
Everything
Focus on examples of four landforms listed above with reference to all other parts of Isostasy – what it is, base level and cyclic landscape development
Isostasy refers to the balance between the Earth's crust rising and sinking due to the adding or removing of weight
The lithosphere (solid part of crust) sits on top of the asthenosphere (semi-molten upper mantle) with the thicker parts of the asthenosphere deeper than the thinner parts. This creates a balance known as isostatic equilibrium
During the last ice age, the Earth's crust had the extra weight of ice sitting on top of it which forced it down deeper into the asthenosphere in certain parts. When this happens it is called isostatic readjustment
When this ice age ended, the weight was lifted as the ice melted, and the crust floated back to its original position. This is known as isostatic adjustment or isostatic uplift
Isostatic processes can lead to a change in sea level (eustatic movement) when the weight of glacial ice causes the earth's crust to sink
The effect of isostasy can be seen on both fluvial and coastal features
Figure 1: Isostasy
Figure 2: Landscape Cycle
Isostatic processes affect a river's base level (lowest level a river can erode its channel to – generally equal to sea level)
When the weight of glacial ice is removed, land rises. This means that rivers are now flowing down a steeper slope giving it more energy to erode
This can occur in the mature/old age stage of a river and is known as 'rejuvenation' whereby the river is made young again
The river forms a new, lower river profile
Example: Kathleen's Falls, River Erne, Co. Donegal
Processes: Rejuvenation (Vertical and Headward Erosion)
A knickpoint is a sudden drop in the river's profile, usually marked by a waterfall
Rejuvenation begins at the rivers mouth as the sea level drops. Vertical erosion is increased and the river cuts a deeper valley as a result
The old river profile is altered through headward erosion, creating a new one. The place where the old river profile meets the new one is called a knickpoint and is evidence of the river becoming young again (rejuvenation)
Knickpoints are cyclical and can develop more than once on a rivers course
Figure 4: Knickpoints
Example: River Barrow, Co. Carlow
Processes: Rejuvenation (vertical erosion)
Once it is rejuvenated, a river will erode vertically again, like in the old age stage
Incised meanders are created when a meandering river valley erodes vertically into its floodplain
They are very deep with really steep sides and can be seen on an OS map through tightly packed contour lines along a meandering river
Figure 5: Incised Meander
Figure 6
Example: River Barrow
Processes: Rejuvenation (vertical, lateral erosion)
Figure 8: Paired Terraces
Example: Donegal Bay
Processes: Rejuvenation (Coastal Erosion)
Figure 9: Raised Beaches
Figure 10: Raised Beach in Devon, England
Landscape Development is cyclical. It happens in three main stages:
Figure 11: Cyclic Landscape Development
Covers hundreds of square kilometres in Co. Waterford and Co. Cork
Best example can be seen in the Knockmealdown Mountains with the height of land varying between 180m and 240m above todays sea level
Formed on the sandstone uplifted during the Armorican folding and consists of a reasonably flat landscape with some individual hills
The sandstone was worn down to a peneplain by an ancient river system
The peneplain was later submerged beneath the sea where layers of limestone and chalk were formed over it
Later uplift brought the land back above sea level again
Figure 12: Munster Peneplain
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