Flooding Flashcards
Define a flood
A flood is temporary excess of water that covers areas which are usually dry.
River Derwent Case Study - Causes of flooding
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Give three positive impacts of floods on people.
- Replenishes drinking water supplies, especially in wells
- Provides sediment that naturally fertilises the soil of the floodplain
- Countries such as Bangladesh or Egypt rely on floods due to the droughts they face.
Give three negative impacts of floods on people.
- Floods spread waterborne diseases
- People and animals can become homeless or drown
- Buildings and infrastructure can be damaged or destroyed.
Give two positive impacts of floods on the environment.
- Fish benefit because they can breed in the stagnant flood water.
- In dry areas, floods can relieve drought by providing drinking water for wild animals.
Give two negative impacts of floods on the environment.
- Flooding can wash chemicals and sewage into local rivers, thus polluting them
- Wild animals can lose their habitat or drown in a flood.
Give three ‘hard engineering’ river management strategies.
- Building a dam or reservoir in the upper course of a river
- Deepening and widening the river channel
- Building high embankments along the side of a river to contain the discharge.
Why is deepening and widening the river or building high embankments along the side of the river an effective strategy to reduce the risk of a flood?
This allows the river to contain more water and therefore, there is a greater discharge required for a flood (positive aspect of deepening/widening).
State the positive aspect of building a dam or reservoir in the upper course of a river.
The reservoir can be used for leisure or hydroelectricity.
State the negative aspect of building a dam or reservoir in the upper course of a river.
The reservoir may flood farmland, displace local people and destroy habitats.
Give three soft engineering river management strategies.
- Afforestation in the upper course of the river
- Land use zoning, where areas most likely to be flooded are not urbanised
- Washlands
Explain what is meant by ‘Washlands’
Washlands are part of the river’s floodplain in the lower course, where a river can flood into temporarily.
They act as a flood storage area.
Case study: Mississippi River, South East USA - Evaluation of river management strategies
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