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Summary - Coasts Case Studies

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Coasts case study notes examine how physical and human processes shape coastal environments, using examples like the Sundarbans in Bangladesh and Morecambe and Heysham in the UK. They cover coastal features, erosion, deposition, and the role of sea level rise and extreme weather. Human impacts such as development, defences, and land use are also explored. Notes include management strategies like hard and soft engineering, as well as sustainable approaches, supported by key data and local context to show how coastal areas are managed and affected differently.

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AQA
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Coasts









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Uploaded on
May 22, 2025
Number of pages
5
Written in
2024/2025
Type
Summary

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Morecambe & Heysham
Case Study - Morecambe & Heysham
Location: Morecambe - SE edge of Morecambe Bay, south of Lake District National
Park. Heysham - near Lancaster overlooking Morecambe Bay. 8.5km
stretch of coastline.

Reason for protection: Large proportion of local economy is based on tourism,
hospitality along seafront
Lots of settlement, infrastructure
Two nuclear power stations
Whole area has many ancient sites managed by National
Trust - SSSI and SAC
Area is vulnerable to storm surges, rising sea levels and
erosion
Protection encourages economic regeneration, attracts
investors


Management types: Rock Armour
Gabions
Concrete Revetments and Sea Wall
Traditional Recurved Sea Wall
Fish Tail Breakwater (rock groynes)
Beach Nourishment


Defence options (SMPs): Do nothing: No investment in flood defences, coast is
allowed to erode/flood.
Managed retreat: Allow coastline to erode but manage the
process to direct it in certain areas
Hold the line: Building coastal defences so position of
shoreline remains the same over time
Advance the line: Build new coastal defences, usually
involves land reclamation

Key stakeholders: Lancaster City Council - Local planning, management
Environment Agency - Flood defences, coastal protection
EDF Energy - Heysham nuclear power stations
Tourism Businesses - contributes to economy
Local residents - input on planning
Morecambe Bay Partnership - Focus on sustainability,
heritage

Main land-use: Hotels and guest houses lining the promenade
Town centre including traditional seaside resort facilities
Heysham nuclear power station and Heysham port
Sandstone cliffs of Heysham Head - site of historical and
ecological importance

, Coastal Management Timeline:
Case Study - Morecambe & Heysham
1977: Major flood event - 6.6m high waves recorded at Heysham, 1300 properties flooded,
sea wall overtopped.

1983: Extreme flood event, wave reflection wall overtopped. 1516 properties flooded and old
sea wall seriously weakened.

1989: Defences built in a 7 phase programme costing £28 million. Strategy 1: Rock
armour/rip rap to enhance and protect existing sea wall. Made of locally sourced limestone.

1990: Two day storm coincided with spring tides, 1.5m surge resulted in 6.5m above normal
levels. £2 million damage to sea walls, 150 properties damaged. Total costs of £21 million.

1991-2007:
Strategy 2: Installation of 10 breakwaters and groynes. 1 million tonnes of locally
sourced limestone
Strategy 3: Traditional recurved sea wall, much of the promenade already had existing
sea walls so in many places they were repaired and reinforced
Strategy 4: 500+ cages of gabions filled with small limestone boulders used in various
locations
Strategy 5: Concrete revetment and sea wall were repaired to the West of Heysham
Head, extending to port and power stations

2018: Morecambe’s £10.8 million sea wall officially opened.




Successes Challeneges


Sea walls, rock armour, groynes have
High costs: multi-million pound
reduced flood risk
investments and expensive maintenance
Improvements along Morecambe’s
Limited long-term sustainability
promenade helped attract visitors
Altered natural sediment movement,
Heysham port and nuclear power stations
affecting local ecosystems
safeguarded from erosion
Uneven protection - some areas more
Involvement of local groups has
vulnerable where defences may be older
improved awareness and support
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