An area of land drained by a river and all of its tributaries
Factor that can increase or decrease flooding
Increase
Steep slopes(means that water travels faster towards the river
increase the likelyhood of flooding
Lack of vegetation/deforestation( there is less trees
to intercept the rainfall meaning more of the water
enters the river)
Impermeable bedrock( water can'nt infiltrate into
the ground and so more flows over the surface)
Building on the floodplain
More impermeable concrete surfaces
Saturated ground
Size of a drainage basin
Drainage basin
Watershed ( the area of high land forming the
boundary and edge of a river basin
Source( where a river begins)
Mouth (where a river meets the sea)
Confluence( the point at which two rivers meet)
Tributary ( a small river or stream that joins a larger river)
Channel ( this is where the river flows)
Drainage basin ( this is the
area of land drained by a
river and its tributaries
storm hydrograph
Shows a rivers response to a
particular rainfall event, it shows how
quickly the water gets into the river.
the quicker the water reaches the river
the more likely there is to be a flood
event
CASE STUDY
Niagara falls
People have utilised the waterfall to make a profit from tourism i.e.
Hotels,Restaurants,Museums,information centres,Boat rides and Helicopter
rides which take full advantage of the tourism)
ADVAN(creates jobs and improves the economy)
DISADVAN( are that the falls
become overcrowded, the tourist
attractions can make it look like a
theme park and the tourists can
have an environmental impact
though erosion,pollution and litter)
Boscastle
Contributers to the flooding in boscastle
Human factors
Village developed on flat land of floodplain
Natural channel of river has been walled preventing it from adjusting to variations in discharge
Natural factors
Narrow valley with interlocking spurs
185mm of rainfall in 5 hours
Steep valley sides that encourage rapid runoff
The village as it is at the confluence of 2 rivers
Monday 16th August 2004
60mm of rainfall fell in 2 hours
The ground was saturated due to weeks of above average rainfall
Effects
Short term
People are homeless and have no access to money within a week of the flood
Damage caused by river to cars and people other belongings, also includes their homes
long term
The pain and anguish of the flood in 2004 may still effect people who lost their homes or treasured percessions
Fear of more freak floods
Financial difficulties, as it will take a long time for the insurance companies to pay for the damage caused
Tourism actually increased in the long term
Hard and soft engineering
Hard
Artificially trying to alter and control the course of a
river
Usually more expensive
Not always environmentally friendly
Less aesthetic
Can be very
effective
Can cause unforeseen problems further down
stream
Building a DAM to control and regulate water flow
Building LEVEES to provide protection against flooding
STRAIGHTENING the river channel to avoid
settlement or speed up the flow of water through an
area
WIDENING AND DEEPENING the river
channel to increase the amount of water the
river can hold
Soft
using the natural features of a river to try and control
flooding
Usually cheaper
More environmentally friendly
Can be less effective
AFFORESTATION planting trees to increase the
amount of interception and reduce the amount of
water entering the river
PLANNING LAWS the local authority can introduce policies
to stop developments being built on the floodplain
MANAGED FLOODING the river is allowed to flood
naturally in some places to prevent it flooding in
populated areas
EARLY WARNING SYSTEMS floodline and flood plans have
been set up by the environment agency to prepare residents in
flood prone areas
Future foolding in the uk
No. people at high risk of flooding will rise from 1.5 million to 3.5 million
Cost of flood damage will rise from £1billion a year to £27 billion a year
Climate change is one of the main cause of the extra flood risk
10% of UK homes are on floodplains as new homes need to be built this could increase
What should be done to reduce this
Householders encouraged not to pave over gardens, this creates more permeable surfaces in towns and cities
Block drainage in upland mountain areas and develop more peat bogs to store
water. this stores water in the mountains meaning less reaches the river
Make homes more flood proff by putting plug sockets higher up walls etc
Restrict building on floodplains
Invest in flood defence schemes but be weary of hard engineering that can cause further problems downstream