Archive - Shore Erosion of the North Norfolk Cliffs
November 13, 2016
Each Sunday we present a notable item from our archives. This EPOD was originally published November 05, 2003
Provided and copyright by: Mike Page, Coastal Concern Action Group
Summary authors & editors: Niels Roode
The soft-rock coastal cliffs near the village of Happisburgh (North Norfolk, UK) are suffering from wave-induced erosion at erratic rates: at times large areas have disappeared overnight, and at others the cliff has remained virtually the same for some years. Villagers in Happisburgh gathered near the cliff-top to spell out a human SOS (behind the row of houses), as a plea to their national government to stop the village from crumbling away.
The North Norfolk cliffs are basically comprised of a contorted mix of silts, sands, clays and gravels that were deposited during the glacial and interglacial phases of the last 2 million years. The cliffs provide little resistance to the aggressive action of North Sea waves, which erode the base of the cliffs. In addition, when the cliff material has a high water content it becomes unstable and, together with wave action, this results in slips & slides of large amounts of material along the coastline, leading to a general retreat of the cliff line.
At least one-quarter of the European Union's coast is currently eroding despite the development of a wide range of measures to protect shorelines from eroding and flooding. The prospect of further sea level rise due to climate change and the heritage of mismanagement in the past - such as inappropriate infrastructure - imply that coastal erosion will be a growing concern in the future.
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