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Story: Coastal erosion

Fiordland coastline

Image
Fiordland coastline

Large waves pound the exposed Fiordland coastline, but these hard, rocky shores are resistant, and erode slowly. The fiords formed when sea levels rose, flooding the U-shaped glacial valleys. Most coastal erosion problems in New Zealand occur on soft shores (sand or gravel) that are exposed to the open sea, rather than hard rocky shores. The landslides visible in this picture were caused by the weather.

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GNS Science

by Graham Hancox

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How to cite this page

Willem de Lange, Coastal erosion – Rocky coasts, Te Ara – the Encyclopedia of New Zealand, https://teara.govt.nz/en/photograph/6339/fiordland-coastline (accessed 4 June 2026).

Story by Willem de Lange, published 2 March 2009.