Difference between revisions 5392734 and 5392735 on simplewikiA '''headland''' is an area of [[land]] that is surrounded by [[water]] on three sides. Very often, the land areas are called ''cape''s. A '''bay''' is an area of water. It is surrounded by land on three sides. The water areas are also called ''gulf''s. Headlands are made of hard rock and bays are made of soft rock. It takes the hard rock longer to erode.
A '''bay''' is a large body of water in the land next to a sea or lake between two headlands. The waves coming to the shore in a bay are usually constructive waves, and because of this, many of them have a beach. A bay may be metres across, or it could be hundreds of kilometres across. Bays form where weak rocks, such as sands and clays, are eroded, leaving bands of stronger rocks, such as chalk, limestone, or granite, forming a headland, or peninsula.
Headlands and bays are formed when there are parallel sections of softer and harder rock perpendicular to the coast. The sea erodes the softer rock faster than the harder rock, forming a bay. The harder rock that is left protruding into the sea is the headland. They also can be made by people mining off the coast.
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Image:Kells Bay.jpg|[[Kells]] bay, on the [[County Kerry|Ring of Kerry]] in [[Ireland]]
Image:Hanauma Bay 1.JPG|Hanauma bay, on the island of [[Hawaii]]
Image:CapeHorn.jpg|[[Cape Horn]] is the southern tip of [[South America]]
Image:Cape of Good Hope.jpg|The [[Cape of Good Hope]] is seen by many as the divider of the [[Atlantic]] and [[Indian Ocean]]
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[[Category:Landforms]]
[[Category:Bays| ]]All content in the above text box is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike license Version 4 and was originally sourced from https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?diff=prev&oldid=5392735.
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