Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Natural Disasters
Anmerkungen:
- http://www.bbc.co.uk/schools/gcsebitesize/geography/natural_hazards/
- Tectonic
- Earthquakes
- Caused by tension between
tectonic plates suddenly
releasing
- THE FOCUS is the
exact point where the
earthquake occurs,
where the energy is
released between
plates
- THE EPICENTRE is
the point directly
above the FOCUS
which is usually
the area most
affected
- SEISMIC WAVES
are waves of
kinetic energy
released from the
FOCUS that cause
destruction.
- Measured with SEISMOGRAPHS
- AFTERSHOCKS occur
as smaller releases of
energy following a
bigger earthquake,
they can still cause
severe damage.
- Measured on the RICHTER SCALE
- Severity is rated
on a scale of 1 to
10
- Each scale is
ten times more
in MAGNITUDE
that the
previous
- CASE STUDIES
- JAPAN 2011
- Occured on Friday
the 11th of March
2011
- MAGNITUDE 9.0 on
the RICHTER SCALE
- 15,893 deaths
- PRIMARY EFFECTS
- Infrastructure damaged
- Buildings damaged and burning
- Trains damaged
- Oil refinery caught fire
- Fukushima nuclear
power plant disaster
- Partial core meltdown
- Explosion damage
- Reactors overheating
- Second biggest
nuclear disaster after
Chernobyl
- Over 15,000 dead
- Over 6,000
injured
- SECONDARY EFFECTS
- Tsunami
- Devastated the coast
- Infrastructure
severely
damaged
- Economic damage
- Towns
destroyed
- People homeless
- 10 metres high
- Killed many people
- Affected all of the Pacific Rim
- Power cut off
- Dirty water
- Diseases spread
- Strain on
already
overwhelmed
hospitals
- Aftershocks
- £189 billion to recover
- MEDC
- Japan used to earthquakes
- RESPONSES
- Citizens calm
- Used to earthquakes
- Mobile device
warning system
- $1.1 million raised
- Emergency
services
acted quickly
- Everyone was
efficient
- Reserve
energy
used
- HAITI 2010
Anmerkungen:
- https://handygeography.wordpress.com/gcse/the-restless-earth-revision-materials/earthquake-case-study-haiti-poor/
- Facts &
Statistics
- MAGNITUDE 7.0
- Occurred on
January 12th
2010
- Estimated 160,000 dead
- Epicentre near Port-au-Prince
- Capital city
- Haiti poorest
country in the
Western
Hemisphere
- £9 billion cost
- LEDC
- PRIMARY EFFECTS
- Landmarks destroyed
- Tourism affected
- 160,000 dead
- 3 million
people affected
- 280,000 buildings damaged
- Infrastructure damaged
- Transport links
- Communication
- Hospitals and schools
- Prison
- 50,000 inmates escaped
- SECONDARY EFFECTS
- 20% of people lost
their job
- Economy damaged
- Dead bodies everywhere
- Disease
- Cholera
- Poor management
lead to many
people without aid
- Violence
- Crime
- Thousands of
people
displaced from
homes
- Homelessness
- Shanty towns
- Can't afford
new homes
- REPONSES
- Charity
- "Hats for Haiti"
- $3.5 billion raised
- $430 million donated from
the EU and USA
- 4.3 people
provided with
food rations
within weeks
- Poor management
- Temporary schools
- Causes
- North American
Plate sliding past the
Caribbean Plate at a
conservative plate
boundary
- Volcanoes
- Formed when MAGMA
reaches the Earth's surface
- Usually over tectonic
plate boundaries
- Mid-Atlantic ridge
- CASE STUDIES
- NEVADA DEL RUIZ 1985
Anmerkungen:
- http://www.slideshare.net/Ruth1618/nevado-del-ruiz-case-study
http://www.slideshare.net/thepack001/nevado-del-ruiz-volcano-case-study
- LEDC
- Aid and
support
inefficient
- Erupted on
the 13th of
November
1985
- Columbia,
South
America
- Lies within
the Pacific
rim of fire
- Causes
- Ice cap melted, creating LAHARS
- Build up of pressure
in the magma
chamber after 100
years of inactivity
- The town
of Armero
was
completely
buried in
ash
- Towns affected were
originally built in
valleys
- Pyroclastic flows and
lahars easily flowed
through
- On top of a
destructive plate
boundary between
the South American
and Nazca plate
- 20,000 dead
- PRIMARY EFFECTS
- Infrastructure
damaged
- Schools
- Hospitals
- Lahars kills
70% of
Armero's
population
- People
died
from
toxic
gases
- SECONDARY EFFECTS
- Area isolated
- Aid
inaccessible
- Lack of
clean
water
- Disease spreading
- Land more fertile
- 8,000 made homeless
- Cost $7.7
billion in
damage
- That was
20% of
Columbia's
GDP
- RESPONSES
- Columbian
Red Cross
provided
aid
- Military
provided
helicoptors
- Vaccines
to prevent
illness were
distributed
- Foreign aid works sent in
- Doctors from Japan
- Supplies from France
and the USA sent in
- Worldwide
television
broadcasted the
story of Omayra
Sanchez
- A girl who's legs were
trapped in mud and
died after three days
of agony
- Met with a lot of sympathy
- MT ETNA 2002
- Location and Background
- Mt. Etna is already a
famously active volcano
- Located on the isle of
Sicily, off the coast of
Italy
- MEDC
- Residents within
the range of the
volcano are well
aware of the risks
and are well
prepared
- Still devastating
- Erupted violently
during the months
of December and
November in 2002
- Situated on top of a
collision boundary
between the Euroasian
plate and the African plate
- PRIMARY EFFECTS
- Over 100 homes were
damaged or destroyed
- Air filled with toxic
chemicals that can
be harmful for
humans and animals
- Wildlife destroyed
- Infrastructure damaged
- Tourism disrupted
- Economy impacted
- Farming disrupted
- Economy impacted
- Transport links destroyed
- 77 confirmed deaths
- Secondary Impacts
- Ash cloud
disrupted air
travel
- Tourists
stranded
- Economy impacted
due to affect on
farming and tourism
- Food prices rose
- Schools closed
- Two-wheeled
vehicles banned for
safety reasons
- Damaged
infrastructure unable
to function
- Soil more fertile from
the dried mineral-rich
lava rock
- Homes destroyed
meant people were
displaced
- RESPONSES
- Short term
- Sicily declared in a state of
emergency by the
government
- Relief aid sent to
affected areas
- Barriers were
build by the army
to divert lava
away from
buildings
- Aid was efficient and
affected areas quickly
recovered
- Sicily used to eruptions
- Long term
- Tax allowances given
to local business
owners to help with
financial recovery
- Damaged buildings were rebuilts
- Scientists pledged to
improve Mt. Etna's
monitoring
- An emergency
evacuation plan
was made
- Occur at
DESTRUCTIVE and
CONSTRUCTIVE
plate boundaries
- MAGMA is
molten rock
beneath the
Earth's
surface
- Becomes LAVA when it
reaches the Earth's surface
- It then dries to form
mineral-rich rock
- Cone shaped
- SHIELD volcanoes
- Formed when the
magma rising is very
runny and can
travel further
before drying
- Eruptions are more
frequent but gentle
- CONSTRUCTIVE
or TENSIONAL
BOUNDARIES
- COMPOSITE volcanoes
- Formed where
the MAGMA rising
is more viscous
and moves less
before drying
- Eruptions
infrequent but
more destructive
- Found at
CONSTRUCTIVE or
COMPRESSIONAL
boundaries
- Produces pyroclastic flows
- Can be underwater
- Island formations
- Types of volcano
- Active
- Still erupts frequently
- Dormant
- Temporarily
inactive
- Not yet extinct
- Extinct
- Inactive for
a very long
time
- Unlikely to
erupt again
- Composed
of several
parts
- Secondary vent
- Smaller holes where
magma escapes
- Main vent
- Main outlet that
magma escapes from
- Magma chamber
- The collection
of magma
below the
volcano
building up
- Eruption occurs when
pressure builds up here and
explodes out the vents
- Crater
- Created when an
eruption blows of the tip
of the volcano
- SUPERVOLCANOES are very
large volcanoes with
massive destructive power
- Erupts at least
1,000km3 of
material
- Forms a CALDERA
- A depression in land as
opposed to a cone shape
- Erupts very infrequently,
hundreds of thousands
of years apart
- Yellowstone is a supervolcano
- Climatic
- Hurricanes
Anmerkungen:
- http://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/ks3/geography/physical_processes/weather_climate/revision/9/
- CASE STUDIES
- Cyclone Nargis
- Primary impacts
- 140,000 dead
- 2.4 million
affected
- Infrastructure destroyed
- Transport links
swept away
- No power
- 2 million homeless
- Buildings destroyed
- Secondary impacts
- Mosquitoes thriving
- Disease
- Poverty
- Area isolated
- Food prices rise
- Crop failure
- Responses
- Myanmar government suspicious of aid
- Did not welcome aid
- A lot of deaths
could of been
prevented
- Faced a lot of criticism
- Aid not well distributed
- Volunteers
harassed
and abused
- Government didn't
have enough money
- Globally, help was
offered but denied
by the government
- Aid workers and
media not allowed in
- Charities raised money,
but the Myanmar
government didn't want it
- Causes
- Myanmar has
destroyed 80%
of its mangrove
coasts
- Impacts worse
- Built up in the Indian ocean
before hitting Myanmar in April
and May of 2008
- Country
devastated
- May 2008
- Myanmar
- South-East Asia
- Category 4
- 140,000 dead
- $10 billion cost
- LEDC
- Hurricane Katrina
Anmerkungen:
- http://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/ks3/geography/physical_processes/weather_climate/revision/10/
- Primary impacts
- Communication broken
- No clean water
- Infrastructure
destroyed
- 1464 dead
- 1.7 million without electricity
- Homes destroyed
- Secondary impacts
- Dirty water
spread disease
- Dead bodies health risk
- $10.5 billion cost
- Job loss
- Emotional trauma
- Businesses
severely
impacted
- Agriculture destroyed
- Tourism decreased
- Wildlife habitats destroyed
- Causes
- Many US states
affected, mostly
Lousianna
- New Orleans
devastated
- Loss of
tourism
- Businesses
disrupted
- Buildings destroyed
- Many people jobless
and/or homeless
- Nationwide
distress
- Responses
- Government
aid was slow
- Accused of being
racially driven
- Violence over aid
- Charities raised
a lot of money
- Lousiana still
affected now
- 1464 dead
- First hit 29th of
August 2005
- South-East
USA
- Lousianna
- Also known as cyclones and typhoons
- Cyclones in the Indian ocean
- Typhoons in the Pacific ocean
- Hurricanes in the
Atlantic ocean
- Formation
- Must be around
the equator
- Within 5° and 30° lattitude
- Water from
26°C to 28°C
- Winds above 74mph
to be classified as a
catergory 1 hurricane
- Heavy rainfall, strong
winds and other related
hazards such as mudslides
and flooding
- Classified
with the
Saffir-Simpson
Hurricane
Scale
- Very destructive
- Droughts
- Classified as when there is
an abnormally long period
of time without
precipitation
- Slightly different for different
countries and climates
- Severe water shortage
- Lack of clean
water can lead to
disease spreading
- Human causes
- Deforestation
- Reduces the soil's ability to hold
water and this quickly dries out
the land (Can lead to
desertification)
- Dams and
reservoirs
- Reduces flow of water
- Provides energy and water
to areas by the reservoir,
but further down the river
can be a severe shortage
- Effects
- Wildlife die
- Agriculture impacted
- Food prices rise
- Famine
- Restrictions on
water usage might
have to be enforced
- People might feel the need to migrate,
putting strain on other countries
- CASE STUDIES
- 'The Big Dry' Australia 2010
- Caused by El Niño
- Annual weather pattern that
causes the trade winds of the
Pacific ocean to reverse
- Australia
has no
rainfall for a
few weeks
- Every few years it
becomes dangerous
- Impacts
- Very severe
water shortage
- Water had to
be imported
- Agriculture impacted
- Food prices rose
- Wildlife dead or
severely affected
- Not adapted to such
extreme weather
- Responses
- Australian government
had to issue a water
usage restriction
- Filling swimming pools banned
- Restriction on time
spent in shower
- Restriction on
garden tending
- MEDC
- Kenya ???
- Natural hazards caused
by the weather
- Flooding
Anmerkungen:
- http://www.slideshare.net/geodebs/revision-pack-2014-gcse-geography-ocr-b
- CASE STUDIES
- Zambezi
- Primary impacts
- Areas flooded and isolated
- Infrastructure destroyed
- Crops destroyed
- The 32 million people
living in the river's
basin all affected
- Secondary impacts
- Food prices rose
by up to 37%
- Disease spreading
through dirty water
- Over 150,000
hippos in the river
- Hippos are very deadly
- Causes
- Exceptionally heavy rain
- Usually a manageable
annual rainy season
- Deforestation
- Soil erosion
- Responses
- Government declared
state of emergency
- 110 relocation
camps established
- Government
allocated $13
million to help
- A total of $7 million was donated
- 2009
- LEDC
- South-East Africa
- Cockermouth
Anmerkungen:
- http://www.acegeography.com/flooding-case-studies-gcse.html
- Causes
- A WARM CONVEYOR from
the mid-Atlantic brought an
exceptional amount of rain
- The town of Cockermouth was built within the
valley basin of two rivers, Derwent and Cocker
- River Derwent burst its banks,
causing severe flooding
- Melting snow from the
North York Moors
contributed to surface runoff
- Dredging the rivers was proposed a few years
ago, but environmental agencies said no
- Endangers fish species
- Between 28 Febuary and 11
March 500mm of rainwater fell
- Responses
- Government provided £1 million
- The Cubrian Flood Recovery
fund was set up, raising £1
million in 10 days
- Temporary railway
station set up
- Helicopter rescued 50 people
- Temporary internet
access at libraries set up
- Army built temporary foot bridges
- RSPCA came in to
rescue stranded pets
- Primary impacts
- 1300 homes flooded
with sewage
- 50 people had to be
evacuated by helicopter
- Buildings destroyed
- 4 bridges collapsed, 12 closed
- One person died, a policeman
trying to save somebody else
- Secondary impacts
- Sewage-infected
water was a
health risk
- People unable to
move back into homes
for over a year
- Cost of repairing a
house at £28,000 each
- Pets distressed and
unable to escape
- Main roads closed,
increasing traffic
- Cost of
£100 million
- Businesses unable
to recover
- 2009
- Cumbria, a county in North-West England
- MEDC
- Heavy rainfall
- Long periods
of rain
- Often more
than 24 hours
solid
- Urbanisation makes
flooding worse because
cities have more
impenetrable surfaces
- Deforestation worsens
flooding because there are
less trees to absorbs water
- Already saturated
ground worsens flooding
- Can be prevented through
dredging and widening rivers