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Beach Measurements
Paper 4, Summer 2010 0460_s10_41Total 30 marks
GCSE Geography exam preparation
Beach measurement questions are a common feature of Paper 4. They follow this pattern: a hypothesis is set out and then measurements are taken on a beach to prove or disprove it.
The
Watch out for slippery rocks/uneven beach heights on groynes
Avoid working near foot of crumbling cliffs
Wear clothing that is easily visible
Wear shoes to protect against sharp objects
Use sunblock
Take a mobile in case of emergency/to call for assistance
Stay in group/pairs
Beach measurement questions – like river measurement questions – often have some opening question about safety. This only needs a commonsense answer to suggest safety points:
Direction of longshore drift
Direction of the prevailing wind
Wind drives waves/wave move in direction of windWaves come to the beach at an angle/obliqueSwash carries material up the beachBackwash takes material back down the beachProcess is repeated with each waveNo credit for swash/backwash by themselves
Make them easy to seeSee how far or in what direction the pebbles had moved
Yes, it’s EASY, isn’t it?
1 mark for plotting and shading bar graph: 81 mark for accurate pebble size: 4cm (4 squares)
Longshore drift moves pebbles along the beach (NOT down the beach)
Most pebbles/specific number of pebbles moved between 20–40 metres
Smaller pebbles moved further than larger pebbles
1.5
Hint:
For a one mark question, please do not waste time using a calculator !
This can be answered in two seconds: highest = 2 and lowest = 0.9
So obviously 1.5
[3]
[3]
Hypothesis is correct: groynes do reduce movement of material. North side of groyne has bigger build up of material.Distance from top of groyne to beach material is less on north side.Groyne has less influence towards sea/more than 25–30 m away from point XAverage measurement from top of groyne to beach = 1.1 to north,1.5 to south of groyne.
http://www.rgs.org/OurWork/Schools/Fieldwork+and+local+learning/Fieldwork+techniques/Coasts.htm
Let’s look at the process: how to measure a beach profile. This is quite often done in coursework on British beaches with longshore drift and groynes. We have no examples in the Costa Blanca even if we wanted to do coursework.
Establish eye level height on each pole and mark it with a piece ofvisible tape/top of pole
Use tape measure to measure 10 m/distance between poles
Put the two ranging poles at 10 m intervals across beach
Hold the clinometer at arm’s length and sight the visible marker
Read the angle of deviation from the horizontal/measure the anglewith the clinometer
Record the angle on a recording sheet
Repeat every 10 m along/up/down/across beach
Take measurements on north and south sides of groyne
[4]Any four points to get the four marks
Steeper profile on the north side of the groyne than the south
More uneven profile on the north side of the groyne than the south
North side of groyne is higher than the south side
Answer must be comparative: NOT “more material on north side of groyne”
Hypothesis is true/groynes did/do affect the beach profile.
Or ‘Yes’ + hypothesis
NOT ‘Yes’ by itself
Do more profile measurements either side of the groyne/every 5 mDo more profile measurements at different sites along beach/at other groynes on this beach, or at sites where there are no groynes on this beach.
NOT on other beaches
Test if the results would be the same at different times of the year/days/conditions.
Check accuracy of measurements for angle of profile/distance between ranging poles/from top of groyne to beach
Check accuracy of measurements by doing more often and calculating average/more people involved/same people do all measurements