Categories: All - waves - management - erosion - movement

by 22-0017 2 7 months ago

92

Second Year Revision

Coastal management is crucial for protecting shorelines from erosion and other environmental impacts. Various structures, such as groynes, sea walls, and gabions, are used to minimize longshore drift and safeguard coasts.

Second Year Revision

Second Year Revision

French

verbs
les temps
Les passe - temps
Months and days of the week
les nombres
Ma Maison

TG

Pictorial Drawing
Logos
Developments
Orthographic projection

Business

Saving
Wages and salaries
Industrial relations
Demand and Supply
Circular flow of income
Budget
marketing
Entrepreneur
Spotting a gap in the market
World of Work
Labour force

English

Base details
Poetic techniques
Theme
Sing Street

Riddle of the Model video

Parents spilt up

First Gig

Conor's American 50's vision

Bands first meeting

Run away to England

Br. Baxter pushing Conor into the sink

First meeting with Raphina

Setting

Socio economic problems

Dublin 1984

Br. Baxter

Barry

Eamonn

Raphina

Brendan Lawlor

Conor Lawlor

Camera angles
Themes

A character I like

Music

Coming of age

Outsiders
Characters
key moments
The Sniper
Key moments

Informer comes

Has the smoke to alert sniper

Setting

War of Independance

River Liffey

Family life

War

Dulce et Decorum
PQE
Message
Overview
Themes
Poetic Techniques

Geography

Glaciers

Eratic

Plucked by glaciers and carried downhill

How they form
Glacier deposition

Moraine

Glacier erosion
Instruments to measure
Tropical Storms
Case study
Types
Climate change
Weather
Human interaction
Paris 2025
Mass Movement
Earthquakes
Tectonic plates
Maps
Settlement patterns
How to draw a map
Parts of a map
Population
Birth and death rates
Population Pyramid
Migration
Self Migration
Forced Migration
Organised Migration
Why people migrate
Soils
Types of soil
How it forms
Seas
Protecting coasts - Coastal Management

Groynes

Concrete or wooden walls or fences that are bulit at the sea at right angles to reduce longshore drift

Gabions

Steel wired cages filled with stones and are stacked on top of each other

Sea walls

Sea walls are walls that curved to push the waves back out into sea

Sea Transportation
Key words

Certain rocks such as limestone dissolve in water

Air in rocks becomes trapped by the incoming waves. The trapped air pressurises the rocks. When the water retreats, the air expands and pressure drops. This repeated compression and release causes rocks to shatter.

Stones carried by the waves hitting off each other. Over time, they smoothed and worn down

Hydraulic Action

case studies
Deposition
erosion

Maharees coastal erosion

Then they planted sand dunes and now they have raised 15 feet and put down fences

Fences stopped people from walking

In 2016 maharees had the road blocked 19 times in the winter

Waves

How do waves erode

Attrition

Solution

Compressed air

Abrasion

The wearing down and grinding down of coasts

Hydraulic Action

Hydraulic action is the ability of moving water to dislodge and transport rock particles

Religion

Art
Types of art
Symbols
Sacred text
Founder
Symbol
Place of wordship
Sacred text
Founders
Moral code
Morality
Sources of morality

Sources of authority

Founders of faith

sacred text

religious principals of rites

religious tradition

family and friends

Personal experience

Personal thinking

Conscience

What is morality

Morality is about how we make decisions that influence our lives.

Influences on morality

Education

media

The law

natural law

Consiouseness

Parents

Decision that impact your life choices
Philosophy

Socrates

A non-religious moral code

Belief in human life and thats all that exits

natural law theory

The Religious moral codes

Buddhism

eight fold path

Hnduism

five daily duties

Moksha

Samsara

Dharma

Karma

Judaism

Covenant

The ten commandments

Islam

Five pillars of faith

Christianity

Beatitudes

Teaching of Jesus in the Bible

Parables

Science

Inheritance and variation
respiration system
space
Chemical equations
Acids and Bases
Genetics
Energy

Irish

Gleann Álainn
An Timpeallacht
An Ghlealach
Subtopic
an Spás
Jeaic ar scoil
Teicnící fileata
Achoimre
Carachtair
Socrú
Téamaí

Maths

Geometry
Angles
Algebra
Solving linear equations

To solve linear equations, you need to isolate the variable on one side of the equation. Here are the steps to follow: 1. Start by simplifying both sides of the equation if necessary, by combining like terms. 2. Use the properties of equality to get rid of any constants or coefficients attached to the variable. You can do this by performing the opposite operation (addition/subtraction or multiplication/division) on both sides of the equation. 3. Continue simplifying until you have the variable term alone on one side of the equation. 4. If the variable has a coefficient of 1, you can simply write the variable. If not, divide both sides of the equation by the coefficient to get the value of the variable. 5. Check your solution by substituting the value back into the original equation. If both sides of the equation are equal, then your solution is correct. Remember to follow these steps carefully and perform the same operations on both sides of the equation to maintain equality.

Expanding
Factorising
Data
Ways to collect data
Types of Data
Currency exchange
Ways to exchange
Money
Currency

History

GAA
Parliamentary Traditions of Ireland
Charles Stuart Parnell

Leader of home rule party

Daniel O' Connell

Catholic Emancipation

known as the great liberator

Traditions
The Famine
American Revolution
Causes
1798 rebellion
Wolfe Tone
Reformation
Course
Martin Luther
Age of exploration
Consequences
Incan Conquest
Aztec conquest
Causes