Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Water on the land case studies
- The River Clyde
- 160 km long, flows through Soctland
- Source= Southern Uplands
region of Scotland (Lowther Hills), Mouth=
estuary on west coast
- meanders between Glasgow and Motherwell, Glasgow built on its floodplain
- oxbow lake near village of Uddingston
- The Falls of Clyde = 4 waterfalls
- Interlocking spurs at Crawford
- LEDC flood- Bangladesh
- August 2007, Rivers Brahmaputra and Ganges, South Asia
- Causes
- Physical
- Heavy rainfall- 900mm July-
saturated the soil
- snowmelt from glaciers in Himalayan mountains
- peak discharge of both rivers happened at the same time
- most of the country is flood plain and delta of the two rivers
- 70% total area less than 1m above sea level
- heavy monsoon rains in summer and tropic
cyclones
- Human
- growth in population leading to deforestation-
more soil erosion and overland flow
- Farraka Dam raised river bed of
Hoogly River (tributary of the Ganges)
- Impacts
- Primary
- Over 2000 deaths
- 25 mil people made homeless
- factories closed, livestock killed
- 112,000 houses destroyed in India
- rivers polluted with rubbish and sewage
- Secondary
- children lost out on education,
4,000 schools affected
- 100,000 people caught water borne
diseases: dysentery and diarrhoea
- flooded fields reduced Basmati
rice yields- prices rose 10%
- farmers and factory workers
became unemployed
- Management
- flood forecasting
and warning system
- warnings dont reach
many rural communities
- man made levees- not
properly maintained
- Immediate response
- blocked transport links prevented and
slowed down evacuations attempted
- governments and international charities
distribute food, water and medical aid
- rescue boats, medical treatment centres (water purification tablets UN)
- Long term response
- homes rebuilt on stilts
- repairing and maintaining levees
- help provided for repairing houses and restarting
economic activities (farming and fishing)
- MEDC flood- Boscastle
- August 2004
- Causes
- Physical
- 3 rivers, the V.a.l.e.n.c.y, Jordan and Paradise
converge on the village of Boscastle
- Heavy rainfall, 3 million tonnes of water added to
tiny drainage basin- infiltration-excess overland flow
- Soils already saturated from previous rainfall
- 3 river valleys steep and narrow
- soils are thin with limited storage capacity
- valley made of old hard sandstone- limited permeability- flashy rivers
- surrounding vegetation includes agriculatural land with limited interception storage
- rain coincided with high tide in the bay- restricted rate of exit of floodwater into the harbour
- Human
- settlement of Bosacastle on a flood plain
- no flood defences had yet been built
- Impacts
- mainly short term, worst time of year when settlement population doubles due to tourism
- Infrastructure damage to buildings and services cost up to £2 million
- 4 footbridges along Valency valley washed away
- Social
- 1000 residents and visitors affected
- no fatalities
- 58 properties flooded- 4 demolished
- 84 wrecked cars, 32 still out at sea
- management
- Immediate response
- excellent emergency services meant no lives lost
- 7 helicopters lifted 100 people to safety
- Long term response
- exceptional event so less need to act
- preventative measures and improvements by Environment Agency, new
culvert on the River Jordan extending a further 80m to the River Valency
- discussions concerning flood risk management in
Upper Valency catchment are, no conclusions yet
- Hard engineering water management scheme- 3 gorges dam China
- Flooding a major problem- particularly in
lower parts of the Yangtze in the areaof
Sandoupingzhen. Dense population and rich
cities made floods more deadly and costly
- Advantages
- Social and economic
- tourist attraction
- improved navigation and trade as far as Chongqing-
Chongqing now one of the fastest growing cities in the world
- water in reservoir used for drinking and farming
- Jobs created during building and now
permanent jobs operating and maintaining
- created sense of national pride (largest dam in the world)
- Environmental
- produces clean renewable hydroelectric energy.
Initially thought to meet 10% of China's energy
needs, however figure fell as China developed
- amount of flooding reduced downstream of the dam
- Disadvantages
- Social and economic
- 1.3 mil people had to be relocated as the reservoir flooded
- archaelogical sites were covered in water
- farmland downstream of the dam became less fertile
- Environmental
- Yangtze freshwater dolphin became extinct due to increased river traffic and pollution
- the sturgeon and alligator are severely threatened because of pollution and disruption to breeding patterns
- Dam is built near a fault line so is vulnerable to earthquakes
- Future
- Long term management
needed- costly
- vital and important tourist attraction- brings in lots of revenue