Why do cliffs erode into arches?
Show answer & explanation
Answer: Waves undercut rock layers
Waves undercut rock layers ✓ — Correct! Waves constantly pound coastal cliffs, exploiting cracks and softer rock layers. They hollow out caves at the waterline on both sides of a headland. When caves meet through the rock, an arch forms! Eventually the arch top collapses, leaving a sea stack. It's erosion sculpting rock over thousands of years!
Animals dig through rock — Wrong. Animals can burrow in soil but don't create rock arches. Wave erosion is the primary force carving coastal arch formations.
Acid rain dissolves arches — Wrong. Acid rain can dissolve limestone, but dramatic coastal arches are carved by mechanical wave erosion, not chemical dissolution.
More Earth Science questions
- A large igneous province is a vast lava-and-magma episode. Why can it hurt far oceans?
- CO2 and SO2 can both leave big eruptions. Why do their climate effects split?
- Sills are buried magma sheets. Why can Siberian sills pose more risk than lava?
- A large igneous province is a continent-scale volcanic outburst. Why abrupt extinctions?
- Hawaiian volcanoes get older northwest of the Big Island. What records that?
- A plume head is a broad hot-mantle blob. Why can it make a huge basalt province?
