Basically, a bay is formed first, which is when the coast erodes and makes kind of a C shape. the bits that are sticking out in the sea are called the headlands. headlands erode too, but slowly, because they are made of a hard rock. bays are made of softer rocks, therefore they erode quickly.
by eating apples
When waves cut completely through a headland, a feature called a sea cave is formed. Sea caves are formed by the relentless erosion of waves gradually wearing away the weaker rock layers of a headland. Over time, the waves create openings and cavities that can extend deep into the headland.
A Headland is formed
Hengistbury Head is a headland in the country of Dorset. The headland is consist of clays, gravels, and sands that was formed 65 million years ago.
It is on the coast, but not really a headland.
a coastal stump is formed when a headland has got the middle of it washed away and it leaves a small piece of rock sticking out
It is a narrow piece of land that projects from a coastline into the sea. It is a strip of land left unploughed at the end of a field.
Sea stacks are formed when a sea arch collapses and sea arches are formed when waves (pound) erode or ware away a whole in the headland.
Headland is a noun
a scottish headland is a ness.
peninsulas are formed when waves start hitting a section of rock on the coastline that is not as easilly eroded as the rock around it. Over time it starts to stick out as a headland and if that process continues for enough years, the waves hitting the headland will start to curve around the sides and begin eroding the softer rock behind.
headlands are formed when the sea attacks a section of coast with alternating bands of hard and soft rock