Case Study- Queensland Floods

Description

This is a case study of flooding in an MEDC, including the causes, effects, and responses.
scarlettrosiex
Mind Map by scarlettrosiex, updated more than 1 year ago
scarlettrosiex
Created by scarlettrosiex almost 10 years ago
200
0

Resource summary

Case Study- Queensland Floods
  1. General information and causes
    1. Queensland received the highest record of rainfall between December and January 2010-2011.
      1. The storm was quite concentrated, with the highest rainfall recorded in the west and northwest of Brisbane.
        1. La nina- intense tropical low pressure seasonal weather also affected the east coast of Australia.
          1. Heavy and intense rainfall from 9-12th January causes flash flooding in Brisbane.
            1. This level of flooding has a recurrence rate of 20-50 years.
              1. In some places rainfall levels were over 200mm a day.
              2. Effects
                1. Food shortages due to agricultural land being destroyed.
                  1. No electricity, intermittent phone range.
                    1. Over 300 roads and 9 major highways were closed.
                      1. 3/4 of council areas in the Queensland state were declared disaster zones.
                        1. 38 people from Queensland died.
                          1. 1,000 people from Theodore and other towns were evacuated.
                            1. Total costs were estimated to be around $2.8 billion.
                              1. At least 70 towns and over 200,000 people were affected,
                              2. Responses
                                1. International aid from countries such as the UK and USA were provided.
                                  1. Private collections of food, clothes and toys were made.
                                    1. Helicopters saved people from their homes.
                                      1. Evacuation camps were made in showgrounds with capacities of 3,000 people.
                                        1. The Red Cross database helped people get information about family/ friends.
                                          1. A total of 55,000 volunteers offered assistance, including 22,000 from the Army.
                                            1. Police were allowed to forcibly remove residents if necessary.
                                            Show full summary Hide full summary

                                            Similar

                                            Going Global: KEY WORDS
                                            Joanna Griffith
                                            Channel Processes
                                            Phoebe Fletcher
                                            GCSE Geography - Causes of Climate Change
                                            Beth Coiley
                                            Effect of Carbon monoxide on oxygen transport
                                            Aarushi Pandit
                                            Bangladesh Flood
                                            Jono Barnes
                                            Biological Psychology - Stress
                                            Gurdev Manchanda
                                            Cells And Cell Techniques - Flashcards (AQA AS-Level Biology)
                                            Henry Kitchen
                                            PSYA1 - attachment, AQA psychology
                                            T W
                                            AQA Biology 12.1 cellular organisation
                                            Charlotte Hewson
                                            Geography Quiz
                                            PatrickNoonan