Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Geography Case Studies
- Global Hazards
- Nepal Earthquake
- 25th April 2015
- 11:41AM local time
- 7.8-7.9 Richter scale
- Population of Nepal at the
time of the earthquake was
700,000, but has since
decreased due to the mass
destruction of the
earthquake
- The focus was 2 KM
down from the
epicenter
- It was a very
shallow
earthquake
- The epicenter was near the
Chinese border in the
Himalayan mountains,
between Kathmandu and
Mount Everest
- Kathmandu is
the capital of
Nepal
- Causes of the Nepal earthquake
- The Indo-Australian plate moves a lot more
rapidly that most other tectonic plates,
including the Eurasian. The Indo-Australian
plate collided with the Eurasian, and
because of the quick acceleration of the
Indo-Australian plate, there was mass
destruction.
- The type of plate boundary at the
fault line was a collision plate
boundary. Both the Indo-Australian
and Eurasian plate are continental,
meaning they are unsinkable.
However, due to the fast
movement of the Indo-Australian
plate, it steeped slightly
underneath the Eurasian plate,
thus creating a larger quake.
- Effects
- Landslides blocked most of the
roads, so emergency services
were prevented from reaching
disaster zones such as small
villages near the epicenter.
- Water supplies and
sanitation were all
destroyed in the
after-math of the
earthquake. This lead
to the spread of
diseases such as
cholera.
- Internet and mobile phone
services and communications
were all cut off and disrupted
by the earthquake.
- Over 180 buildings
in Kathmandu
alone were reduced
to rubble
- Management
- The Nepalese Government struggled to
send out and distribute emergency
supplies to places that were made
inaccessible by secondary effects such as
landslides and avalanches
- Schools and health
facilities were closed
after the earthquake
- Responses
- India
- 1o tonnes of blankets
- 50 tonnes of water
- 22 tonnes of food
- Doctors
- 2 tonnes of
medical supplies
- Emergency task
force to help
survival victims
- UK
- 30 tonnes of
humanitarian
aid
- 8 tonnes of equipment
- Hurricane Katrina
- Causes
- Louisiana and
Mississippi are in
the Gulf of Mexico.
Sea temperatures
are usually 27
degrees +, so
tropical storms can
form
- A storm formed 200 miles
south-east from the Bahamas.
It moved north-west over the
southern point of Florida and
traveled to the Gulf of Mexico
- As it traveled over the warm
ocean water of the Mexican
Gulf, it became even stronger,
turning from a tropical storm
into a volcano
- On the 29th august 2005,
Hurricane Katrina struck land,
bring winds of up to 200km/h
and 200-250mm of rainfall
into Louisiana and a storm
surge of up to 8.5m in
Mississippi
- Consequences
- More than 1800
people were killed
- 300,000 houses were
destroyed and
hundreds of
thousands were left
homeless
- Large areas were
flooded. 80% of New
Orleans was flooded
- 3 million people
were without
electricity
- Roads were
damaged and
bridges collapsed
- Coastal
inhabitants were
damaged
- 230,000 jobs were
lost due to
damaged
businesses
- Water supplies were
polluted with sewage
and chemicals
- Total cost of damage
was estimated at $150
billion
- Rescue and recovery effects
were hampered by a
disagreement between
national, state and local
officials
- Responses
- 70%-80% of New Orleans
residents were evacuated
before the hurricane reached
land. Still, the death count
was catastrophic
- Mississippi and Louisiana declared
states of emergency. They set up
control centers, emergency
shelters and they stock-piled on
supplies
- Over 50,000 people
were rescued by the
coastguard, police, fire
services and army
- Charities gave
donations, provided
aid and gave millions
of hot meals
- US government gave
over 16 billion dollars for
rebuilding homes and
funded repair of other
essensial infrastructures
- In low lying areas,
the government
recommended
building on stilts, or
not rebuilding at all
- To repair and improve flood
defenses in New Orleans, it
cost $14.5 billion.
Development finishes in
2013
- European Heat Wave
- Facts
- Heat wave; a long
period during which
the temperatures are
much higher than
normal
- Heat wave conditions are different in
different places.A heat wave in the UK
would be much cooler than a heat wave
in Spain, where higher temperatures are
usually expected
- Heat waves are cause
when anticyclones (areas
of high pressure) stay in
the same place for a long
duration of time
- Causes of the 2003 Heat Wave
- An anticyclone was
situated over western
Europe for much of
August
- Air moves clockwise around an
anticyclone so hot and dry air
from the center of Europe was
bought to western Europe. This
meant temperatures in the UK
was higher than normal and the
rainfall in the UK was lower than
usual. This caused crop failure in
some badly affected areas
- The anticyclone blocked
low pressure systems
that would usually bring
cooler, rainier conditions
from the Pacific Ocean
- Consequences of the 2003 Heat Wave
- People suffered from;
heatstroke, dehydration,
sunburn and breathing
problems due to air pollution.
Some people died from
drowning whilst trying to cool
off in lakes, rivers and pools
- 2000 people
died in the UK
linked to
heatwaves
- 20 people were injured
from lightning strikes
during thunderstorms
caused by the heat
wave
- Water levels fell in
reservoirs, which
threatened water
supplies to houses
and businesses
- Livestock died due
to the heat and
crop yields were
lower due to the
lack of water
- Trains were
disrupted by rails
buckling in the
heat and some
roads melted,
which caused long
delays
- UK Response to the 2003 Heat Wave
- NHS and Media gave
guidance to the public on
how to survive the
heatwave. They said
drink lots of water, have
cools baths and showers
and to keep rooms cool
- Water limitations
were put in place.
Some areas had
hosepipe bans
- The speed limit was imposed
on trains due to the rails
buckling. Some rails were
painted white to reflect the
heat and keep them cool
- The UK created a 'heat
wave plan' to minimise
the consequences of
future heat waves
- Changing Climate
- Distinctive Landscapes
- Dorset Coast
- South coast of England
- Called the Jurassic coast as
it has a lot of fossils from
the Jurassic period. Many
come to look for fossils
- Popular tourist
destination
- Durdle Door
- An arch
- Formed on a hard
limestone headland
- Erosion from waves open
up a crack in the
headland which becomes
a cave, which then
develops to an arch.
- Gradually being
broken down by
mechanical, chemical
and biological
weathering
- The Foreland, Old Harry
and His Wife
- The Foreland is a
headland and is made
from a band of chalk.
- The arch at the end of the
headland collapsed,
forming a stack. The
stack is called Old Harry
- The stump is
called Old
Harry's Wife
- They were formed by salt
and carbonation
weathering along with
erosion. The vegetation
growing on top of the stack
and stump breaks the rock
up through biological
weathering.
- Chesil Beach
- A tombolo
- It joins the Isle of
Portland to the
mainland
- Formed by longshore drift
- Behind Chesil beach is a
shallow lagoon called
The Fleet Lagoon
- Lulworth Cove
- A small bay formed after
a gap was eroded in a
band of limestone.
- Behind the
limestone band is
a clay band.
- Clay is soft so it is
eroded and
transported away
- The limestone cliffs forming
at the back wall of the bay
are vulnerable to mass
movement, and sometimes
experience small slides and
slumps
- Swanage Bay
- The cliffs backing
Swanage Bay is clay.
- Clay is soft
- It erodes quickly
- Towards the Northern end
of the bay, the cliffs are
covered in vegetation,
stabilising them and
protecting them from
frontward weathering.
- Elsewhere the cliffs
are not protected by
vegetation so weak
weather weakens
them and can cause
slumps.
- Longshore drift carries
material (usually gravel)
from the south to the north
of the bay. Erosion is the
main process in the
formation of the bay.
- Dorset Coast Climate and Weather
- Temperature
- Warm, dry
summers (21
degrees in July)
- Mild, wet winters (3
degrees in January)
- Salt weathering is the main form of
mechanical weathering, particularly in
the summer. The warm temperatures
causes the sea water to evaporate from
rocks quickly, leaving a build-up of salt
crystals in tiny cracks in the rock
- Mild winters mean that freeze-thaw
weathering is uncommon as it is not
cold enough for ice to form
- Wind
- The location of the coast
leaves it exposed to
prevailing wings from the
south-west.
- These winds can bring storms
to the UK from the Atlantic
Ocean.
- Storms bring high energy,
destructive waves which increase
erosion upon the cliff face
- Hydraulic action and abrasion
increase in stormy weather and erode
at the base of the cliffs. This makes
them unstable and prone to mass
movement
- Rainfall
- Low amounts of annual
rainfall, but may
experience wet winters.
- Rainfall is
heaviest during
storm periods
- Soils and rocks are heavier
when saturated. This makes
them prone to mass movement
during rainfall seasons
- In January 2016, rainfall combined with high-energy waves during
Storm Frank caused the cliffs to colllapse between Burton Bradstock
and West Bay
- Sustaining Ecosystems
- Amazon
- Urban Futures
- Lagos
- MIgration
- Rapid population growth due to
large amounts of rural-urban
migration
- There is an urban
sprawl of migrants
moving to Lagos
looking for
employment and a
better quality of life.
- This creates many slums as there is not
enough housing, and if there is it is expensive
so many cannot afford it.
- Lagos incomes are
approx. 4X higher
than in village
settlements in Nigeria
- Chad and Niger migrants
add to the increasing
population of Lagos.
- Lagos used to be a small fishing
settlement inhabited by the
Yoruba People. It now has a very
diverse ethnic proportion.
- Lagos has become overcrowded,
polluted and congested. Lagos is
located on the coast so there isn't
much room for expansion. This means
the population density is very high
- Facts
- Lagos is the largest
city in Nigeria. It's
built around the
western shore of a
large lagoon
- Nigeria is an LIDC.
It has the biggest
economy in Africa,
despite it's status.
- Population: 21 Million
- One of the fastest
growing urban areas in
the world. It grows by
over 500,000 people
per year
- Was under British rule
during the colonial
times and it was the
center of many trades.
- It was the National
Capital until 1991, but it
still remains the main
financial center for the
whole of Western-Africa
- Has an
International
Port and
Airport
- Important
center for
regional and
global trade.
- City has 80% of
Nigeria's industry
and a lot of global
companies are
located in Lagos
- Ways of Life
- Lagos has a big film industry
and produces popular
'Nollywood' films. They are
thriving in the music
industry and introduced
many music styles such as
Afrobeat and Afro hip-hop
- Western-style fashion is
becoming increasingly
common among rich
inhabitants of Lagos, but
many people still retain their
traditional dress sense and
ways of life, for example;
fishing in the lagoon or
making crafts to sell
- There are around
250 different ethnic
groups in Lagos.
However, this
creates minor
ethnic tension
- 2/3 of the
population live
in slums. Many
of the remaining
1/3 live in high
rise flats in the
CBD
- Street parties, pool parties and
nightclubbing are popular leisure
activities in Lagos, and there are
many festivals throughout the
year (Lagos International Jazz
Festival, Badagry Festival, Eyo
Festival). These celebrate music,
food and local culture
- Shopping is popular in Lagos. There are
lots of street vendors, specialist
markets, and small rows of shops. The
CBD on Lagos Island is modernised with
Western-style shops and supermarkets
which sell large selections of
international foods
- Product consumption is rising in
Lagos. As people get wealthier, they
can afford more consumer goods and
use more resources. Consumption of
energy is rapidly increasing in Nigeria
and Lagos is responsible for half of
this increase
- Housing, Health, Waste and Jobs
- Squatter Settlements
- Over 60% of Lagos live in slums, such as Makoko.
- Houses in Makoko are made out of flimsy, wooden
huts built on stilts over lagoons. These are illegally
built and people are evicted. Slums are destroyed to
clean up Lagos. This leaves many homeless.
- In Makoko there is only 1 primary school. Many
families cannot afford child schooling
- Communal toilets are shared
by 15 households and most
of the waste goes straight
into the lagoon. This is
always full of rubbish and
raw sewage. This aids to the
spread of disease such as
cholera
- Water can be purchased in
Makoko from a communal water
point, but for some households
this is 3KM away. The only
electricity comes from illegal
connections which is often cut out
- There are high levels of crime in
Makoko. The slum is patrolled by
gangs called the 'area boys'. They
commit crimes and act as the
informal 'police' of the slum
- Health
- Most of the city doesn't
have access to proper
sewers or clean water.
This leads to the spread
of cholera
- The stagnant water
is a breeding ground
for mosquitoes . This
leads to large and
wide spread malaria
infections
- There's limited health care facilities
and many cannot afford proper
treatment
- Many rural migrants
distrust western medicine
and prefer to seek help
from traditional healers
- Informal Sector Jobs
- Not enough formal jobs for
migrants. Many search the
Olusosun dump for items to sell.
This is dangerous as the dump
contains toxic waste
- 60% of the working population work in the
informal sector as street sellers, barbers and
carpenters to name a few
- No protection financially. Long hours=Little pay
- Street sellers stalls are
bulldozed to make way
for new developments
and road widenings
- Many live off as little as $1.25 a day
- Waste Disposal
- 9000 tonnes of waste is produced in Lagos per day
- only 40% of rubbish is
formally collected, the
rest are left in large
rubbish dumps. EG:
Olusosun, which contains
toxic waste
- Waste disposal and emissions
from factories are not
controlled, leading to air and
water pollution
- Dynamic Development
- Democratic Republic of Congo
- Facts
- GNI per capita; $410
- Life expectancy;
59 years of age
- 61% literacy rate
- HDI; 0.43
- DRC is in Central
Africa. It is nearly
landlocked, apart
from a small stretch
of coastline to the
west.
- One of the poorest countries in
the world
- Population of around 79
MIL. High birth rates cause
the population to grow
very rapidly. This leads to
an increase need for food,
water, education and
sanitation
- DRC has very rich natural
resources. EG: copper, gold, oil
and diamond. The fertile soil
makes growing crops such as
coffee, sugar and cotton a
very popular trading factor.
- DRC has rich deposits of
mineral ores such as coltan
and wolframite. These are
used in laptops, computers,
mobile phones, TVs and
cameras.
- despite having great natural
resources, DRC has low
development and is a very poor
country
- Political and Social factors
- DRC was a Belgian colony from 1885-1960.
By 1060, DRC had a booming industry, and
education and health care were improving
- In the 60's, most of DRC's wealth created from mining and
farming was given to other countries . Native people were
not allowed to vote, and were only allowed a very basic
education
- DRC gained independence from
Belgium in 1960. There was conflict on
who would then rule. In 1965, Mobutu
Sese Seko seized power.
- Mobutu Sese Seko
- Sese Seko was corrupt. He allowed armed forces to
loot the country, taking goods and money. This lead to
huge inequalities in weath throughout the country. A
small number of people were very rich, and a large
number of people were extremely oiir
- Large companies payed bribes to gain
access to mineral resources. Much of the
resulting wealth left the country, so the
locals did not benefit
- Mobutu forced many foreign owned businesses
to leave the country, leading to a loss of jobs and
wealth. Mobutu refused to pay back debt to
Belgium. This lead to the span of cancellations of
development projects throughout the
Democratic Republic of Congo
- For much of his rule, there was
conflict. This caused damage to
crops, property and
infrastructure. People had to
flee, and healthcare services
were spar.
- Mobutu was
overthrown in 1997.
This lead to a civil war
which lasted until
2003.
- Joseph Kabila became president in 2001.
He promised to direct his focus on
improving infrastructure, health,
education, housing and jobs. He also said
that access to resources such as water and
electrical power would improve within
time
- Since 2012, there have
been signs of
economic growth, but
they have been
relatively low
- Development 'Holdbacks'
- Growing global demand for electronic products has
increased the demand for raw minerals in DRC. In
parts of DRC, armed groups force people to work in
dangerous and illegal conditions to mine these
particular ores (coltan and wolframite)
- Fighting over mine
ownership causes
millions of deaths. This
leads the ores to be
called 'conflict minerals'
- Many companies are now buying minerals
from other countries, where forced labor
and wars are not a problem. The disinterest
of sales in DCR leads to a hindering
economic development
- DRC Millennium Development Goals
- Reduce poverty and hunger
- In 2005, 71% of people lived in
poverty. In 2012, it was 63%. This is
an 8% decrease.
- Malnutrition has increased from
51% (2000), to 66% (2015)
- Education for all
- In 1999, 35% completed
primary education. In 2013,
72% had a primary
education available
- Promote gender equality
- The percentage of girls finishing
primary has doubled from 32% in
1999 to 65% in 2013. However, the
percentage for boys education has
also increased in this time period,
showing that inequality has
increased slightly.
- There are fewer women
than men in paid work,
and on average they
earn less whilst
performing the same
jobs as men
- Reduce child death rates
- The death rate of children under 5
decreased from about 176 per
1000 in 2000 to about 120 per 1000
in 2013.
- More than 70% of children are now
vaccinated against measles, compared
to the 20% in 1999
- Reduce maternal death rates
- The number of women dying
in childbirth decreased from
around 870 per 100,000 in
2000 to around 690 per
100,000 in2015
- The availability of
health care for mothers
during childbirth has
increased since 1990
- Stop the spread of diseases
- The percentage of people with HIV/AIDS
has decreased from about 5% to about 1%
since 2000. This is partially due to better
education and more widely available
contraception
- The proportion of people with
malaria halved between 2000
and 2015. This is because of the
wider availability of mosquito
nets
- Make development sustainable
- About 50% of the
population have access to
clean water. This is a small
increase since 2000
- There are efforts to preserve the
rainforerst. For example; the
government has created
protected areas and put bans on
new logging operations
- Promote international links
- In 2008, China gave the DRC
$6 billion to spend on
infrastructure, in return for
access to some of its
mineral resources
- UK in the 21st Century
- Resource Reliance