Geography - All case study's (Unit 1 & 2)
- Created by: Wpullen
- Created on: 13-04-17 15:16
The Restless Earth - Volcanic Eruption
Name of volcano - Monterat 1997
Location - Carbbean
Type of volcano - Composite
Casue
Destructive plate boundary, Plate names were Camibean and North America
Effects - Primary - 23 people killed
Secondary - Airport closed
Effects/impacts - Negaitve, homes distroyed, along with tourist industry
People's responses
Immediate - Evactuations, over 5000 left, 50% left island
Longterm - £41 Million given, each islander offered £2,400
The Restless Earth - Tsunami
Name and date - Indian ocean 2004
Places affected - S,E Asia
Cause
Strength of earthquake - 9.0 Richter scale
Plate names were Pacific plate and Indo Australian
Effects - Secondary - 220,000+ dead, 500,000 houses destroyed. Fishing boats destroyed
Close to epicentre - Indonesia
Distance affected - 4000km
People's responses
Immedoate - Blankets and food given. In one week over £450million dotated
Long term - Earlt warning tsunami, bouys in indian ocean
The Restless Earth - Earth quake in rich part of w
Place and date - L'Aquilla, Italy 2009
Richter scale - 6.3
Cause
Type of plate boundary - Destructive
plate names were Eurasian and African
Effects- Primary - 290 deaths, 1,500 injured
Secondary - Water pipe caused landslide
Effects - High, Economic costs was $315 billion but less social effects
People's responses
Immediate - Camps build for 58,000 homeless, taxes suspended
Long term - Promise to build new town
The Restless Earth - Earth quake in poor part of w
Place and date - Kashmir, Pakistan 2005
Richter scale - 7.6
Cause
Plate boundary - Destructive
Plate names were Eurasian and Indo - Australian
Effects- Primary - 80,000 death, 75,000 injured
Secondary - Disease and starvation
Effects - High, costs to repair low, but social costs great as 40,000 people relocated
People's responses
Immediate - Little responses - blocked roads which meant little help could get there
Long term - New health centres, relocation, Money from goverment
Water on land - River flood In poor part of world
Name of country - Bangladesh 2004
places affected - Dhaka
Causes - Snowmelt in himalayas
Physical - Floodplain and 70% of land above sea level, monsoon rains 2000mm per year
Human - Removed forest increases soil erosion and overland flow
Effects - Flood covered more than half the country, 760killsed, 8.5 million homes, bridges and roads distroyed
People's responses
Short term - provide food, water, medicine, plastic sheets, boats and rescue people
Longterm - 3500km of coastal and river embankments, dams and storage basen
Water on land - River flood in rich part of world
Name of country - UK
Location - Boscastle, Cornwall
Causes
Physical - 200mm rain in 4 hours, steep vally sides, narrow vally funnelled water
Human - Bridge in vally held water back, trapped vechicles etc, made flooding worse
Effects - 3m high wall of water, cars swept into harbour, Shops and houses distroyed
People's responses
Short-term - Helecopters airlifted people to safety
Long-term - Impact on tourism, shops open 1 year after event
Water on land - Dam/reservoir in the UK
Location - Kielder water, Northumberland
Issues resulting from its construction:
Economic - Job oppotunities in tourism and forestry
Social - Water and land based activitites in and around the lake
Envirometal - Largest woodland in the uk created
Sustainable water supply - Most reliable, supplyed water in the driest years
Benefits greater than costs?
-Successful scheme, benefits were greater than costs
Coastal Zone - Coastal flooding
Location - London and SE England, Thames
Causes
Why is the risk high - Low-lying area, sinking into sea due to rising sea level - global warming
Impacts
Economic - Propertry assets - £100billion
Socal - 1.25 million people live in Thames flood zone, 69 tube stations, 400 schools
Political - Houses of parlment in floodzone
Coastal Zone - Coastal habitat
Location - Essex marshes
Environmental characteristics
Mudflats, sand banks, salt marsh and grassland
Species living there
Crabs, birds(redshank, oystercatcher) and marsh plants
Strategies for conserving the enviroment
Allow rising sea levels to flood the land, seperae farmland - managed retreat
Sustainable strategy?
Highly sustainable, managed retreat - working with nature
Coastal Zone - Coastal management
Location - Mappleton, holderness coast
Reasons why needed - Village threatened to be lost to the sea
Methods used
£2 Million spend on coastal protection - Rock groynes and cliff protection
Hard/soft engineering?
Hard engineering
Benefits - Mappleton village rate of erosion reduced + protected
Drawbacks - Increasted rate of erosion further down the coast
Overall
The drawbacks are huge as large ammounts of farmland and settlement down the coast are under threat
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