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605734
Flooding In Bangladesh
Description
Rivers And Coasts Flooding in a LEDC
No tags specified
case studies
geography
geography
case studies
gcse
Mind Map by
Olivia Brooklyn
, updated more than 1 year ago
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Created by
Olivia Brooklyn
almost 11 years ago
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Resource summary
Flooding In Bangladesh
Bangladesh
Densely Populated
One of the worlds poorest countries
140 million people live on flood plains (80% of land is flood plain) of the river Ganges, Brahmaputra and Meghna
Affected by two types of floods
River floods
Happen every year and are part of natural cycle of snow-melt and monsoon rainfall
Floods bring millions of tons of silt that adds to the soil's fertility
Flood water is used to irrigate farmland and is important part of the yearly cycle of agriculture
Flood water mostly controlled by storm drains and embankments
Some years the volume and pattern of rainfall is extreme and water level rise dangerously high causing severe floods
Coastal floods
Created by cyclones that build up in the Indian Ocean and move towards the Bay of Bengal. Water is funnelled towards Bangladesh creating a storm surge
Causes of floods
Trees cleared for fuel and grazing so increased surface runoff
Heavy monsoon rains causes summer flooding
Melting of snow from the Himalayas adds to the volume of water in warmer months
Deforestation in the Himalayas increases surface runoff
70% of total land area is less that 1m above sea lever - nowhere for water to drain
Increases surface run-off leads to soil erosion and more silt, raising river beds
Meeting of 3 huge rivers increases the flood risk
Cyclones create a storm surge
Rapid unplanned urban growth has added to the problem of flooding
Although physical factors increase the risk of flooding, there is an increasing number of human influences
1998 Flood
Rain exceptionally heavy and water levels reached record heights
Floods covered nearly 60% of the country
All main river channels were flooded
Capital city of Dhaka and number of regional cities were flooded
Hundreds killed and millions homeless
Agriculture land and crops were lost / contaminated by polluted water
900 bridges and 15,000km of roads were destroyed
2004 Flood
Monsoon arrived early and heavy rain fell from late June
Brahmaputra and Meghna Rivers had risen above their danger levels
A week later, flood waters drained southwards and Dhaka had begun to flood
Flood waters over-topped many flood protection embankments, inundating areas not provided with storm drainage systems
Affected 36 million people
Mid-August flood waters fallen in most areas
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