Delicious! So grateful for your time and technique. This is an interesting season for the Mappleton configuration. Terminal groyne effect meets sediment segmentation model. A body of beach (SSB-16) migrating south is trying to pass the defences. Higher beach level normally reduces cliff loss, but here TGE is dominant. Such bodies arrive about every five to six years. The last pass of any meaningful volume was 2008 (SSB-13). The Red Band, exhibiting some differential erosion, is particularly well captured [esp. timestamps 13:46-14:25]. Don't ask - no one really knows the how and the why. (Triassic material no doubt, but its presence as a sharply delineated unit is not convincingly explained.) Glimpse of a clear till boundary at [14:46], not expected given the state of the cliffs. Thank you for all your work during 2024. Appreciated now, and will be in the future.
BTW, as copyright owner of TT footage, what is your feeling towards a still (frame) from a video being inserted as an image in a dedicated web page to illustrate a particular situation better than is possible at ground level? Full attribution of course, with link.
Used to regularly fish Mappleton a decade ago, amazing how rapidly cliff erosion occurred in the car park area recently despite the rock groynes. Appears they needed another north east facing one instead of the southerly facing one which doesn't seem long enough to protect from east & south easterly storms. Excellent drone footage, thank you 👍
many will go to mappleton and be in shock and awe to what they remember to now, that they never photographed what was, yer have captured forever given such 'wishes' with angle views, great work and thanks;
In January, we had 83 subs...I set myself the goal of 1000 by the end of the year. The journey has been spectacular so far 😁 Thank you, all the best. 😊
Ok, I would not be parking my car anywhere near there 🚘😳 Your shots of the sky are spectacular, the colours look as though they have been painted by a master artist, even the stones on the beach , when you pan downward to put your camera down, look like perfectly smooth semi precious stones of different colours. You really are picking up the detailed colours of nature in your footage … fabulous 😊👍
Fantastic videos 👍 Noticeable that North of the Mappleton coastal defences, the sand has built up and the cliff hasn't eroded. But South the defences have accelerated the erosion. The longshore drift runs North to South, years ago (at school) we knew that localised sea defences would cause this... the same has happened South of Withernsea. If there hadn't have been sea defences, would the Holderness coastal erosion have been less ...
Amazing shots ! really interesting to see what has happened. Protecting Mapleton started the accelerated erosion at Cowden almost immediately. Messing with longshore drift is very risky, Mr Potato Head could have foreseen that one
These cliffs are made of sedimentary clay, with next to no structural integrity at all, which can be seen by the fact that there is no under washing of the cliff base.. Erosion on these cliffs has been going on for millions of years and was most likely only slowed down temporarily by the last ice age. This is a totally natural process. Unfortunately, the answer to this problem is don't build your houses in stupid places.
@@timothystravels8492 Well according to Wikipedia the village is no longer in danger, but it's the sea defences they put in to protect the village, that is responsible for the increased erosion to the south. If you look on google earth timeline, you can see that no erosion has taken place from the village and to the north since 1985. This is man made, but not man made in the context of any climate change or global warming, they simply put the sea defences too far north to save the carpark.
Agreed...Cliff Farm which has just been demolished in Out Newton is one such property that has suffered since 1985 and the increased erosion to the south.
Delicious! So grateful for your time and technique.
This is an interesting season for the Mappleton configuration. Terminal groyne effect meets sediment segmentation model. A body of beach (SSB-16) migrating south is trying to pass the defences. Higher beach level normally reduces cliff loss, but here TGE is dominant. Such bodies arrive about every five to six years. The last pass of any meaningful volume was 2008 (SSB-13).
The Red Band, exhibiting some differential erosion, is particularly well captured [esp. timestamps 13:46-14:25]. Don't ask - no one really knows the how and the why. (Triassic material no doubt, but its presence as a sharply delineated unit is not convincingly explained.)
Glimpse of a clear till boundary at [14:46], not expected given the state of the cliffs.
Thank you for all your work during 2024. Appreciated now, and will be in the future.
BTW, as copyright owner of TT footage, what is your feeling towards a still (frame) from a video being inserted as an image in a dedicated web page to illustrate a particular situation better than is possible at ground level? Full attribution of course, with link.
Fantastic thank you Brian.
I realise that i don't quite understand what I capture in these films....you clarify many things. 😁
Used to regularly fish Mappleton a decade ago, amazing how rapidly cliff erosion occurred in the car park area recently despite the rock groynes. Appears they needed another north east facing one instead of the southerly facing one which doesn't seem long enough to protect from east & south easterly storms. Excellent drone footage, thank you 👍
Thank you, and I think you're right 🤔
many will go to mappleton and be in shock and awe to what they remember to now,
that they never photographed what was, yer have captured forever given such 'wishes'
with angle views, great work and thanks;
You're most welcome. I hope the footage serves purposes far beyond my understanding. 😊
spot on great filming so sad to see the erosion but will only to get worse
Thank you, much appreciated.
It can't be stopped, that's for certain. 😏
Excellent drone footage 👏
Thank you kindly 😁
Wishing you and the WingCommander a healthy, happy and successful NewYear. Take great care!
And to you, kind sir 😉😊
Wow what a great comparison video of over just a few months and how it’s changed the landscape 👏👏👏👍
Great to be able to use my own footage as a comparison. Couldn't do that in the beginning (obviously 😅)
Cheers buddy
Great to see the last section where your previous footage is compared to the last. Lots of effort and a great achievement. Beautiful sunrise 🌅
Thank you Sheila, it's great being able to compare with my own footage. 😊
And yes, that sunrise was a beauty 😍
Excellent footage. Looks like you will be at 1000 subs very soon! Wishing you both a happy new year
In January, we had 83 subs...I set myself the goal of 1000 by the end of the year.
The journey has been spectacular so far 😁
Thank you, all the best. 😊
Wow! Just wow. Thanks to you, the excellent drone and Wing Co T.C. for doing this " so I don't have to" , lol.
Most welcome 😅
another great video thanks for posting have a good xmas
Thank you kindly, all the best 😊
Ok, I would not be parking my car anywhere near there 🚘😳
Your shots of the sky are spectacular, the colours look as though they have been painted by a master artist, even the stones on the beach , when you pan downward to put your camera down, look like perfectly smooth semi precious stones of different colours.
You really are picking up the detailed colours of nature in your footage … fabulous 😊👍
Delighted to read that...thank you 😊
Very good litter presentation allowing thought without interuption.
You're welcome 😊
Fantastic videos 👍 Noticeable that North of the Mappleton coastal defences, the sand has built up and the cliff hasn't eroded. But South the defences have accelerated the erosion. The longshore drift runs North to South, years ago (at school) we knew that localised sea defences would cause this... the same has happened South of Withernsea. If there hadn't have been sea defences, would the Holderness coastal erosion have been less ...
Thank you,
You're right, I've noticed the same thing in Hornsea, just after the groynes.
Amazing shots ! really interesting to see what has happened.
Protecting Mapleton started the accelerated erosion at Cowden almost immediately. Messing with longshore drift is very risky, Mr Potato Head could have foreseen that one
Yup....messing with nature's balancing act is risky. 🫣
Why dont they spray it with WD40 ?
Fixes most things 🤔😅
@@timothystravels8492 I take my dog is summer as I live close by and did live in Withernsea for a while .
These cliffs are made of sedimentary clay, with next to no structural integrity at all, which can be seen by the fact that there is no under washing of the cliff base.. Erosion on these cliffs has been going on for millions of years and was most likely only slowed down temporarily by the last ice age. This is a totally natural process. Unfortunately, the answer to this problem is don't build your houses in stupid places.
A lot of owners originally thought they had far longer than they have.. The erosion is speeding up in a lot of these areas.🤔🫣
@@timothystravels8492 Well according to Wikipedia the village is no longer in danger, but it's the sea defences they put in to protect the village, that is responsible for the increased erosion to the south. If you look on google earth timeline, you can see that no erosion has taken place from the village and to the north since 1985. This is man made, but not man made in the context of any climate change or global warming, they simply put the sea defences too far north to save the carpark.
Agreed...Cliff Farm which has just been demolished in Out Newton is one such property that has suffered since 1985 and the increased erosion to the south.
Wait for the YT using your video to call it "Rising sea levels due to climate change"...
Hope not 🤔🫣