Geography - Tectonic Hazards Flashcards
Natural Hazard
An event that threatens people or has the potential to cause damage, destruction and death
Conservative plate margin
Tectonic plate margin where two tectonic plates slide past each other
Constructive plate margin
Tectonic plate margin where rising magma adds new material to plates that are ‘diverging’ or moving apart
Destructive plate margin
Tectonic plate margin where two plates are converging or coming together and the oceanic plate is subducted. It can be associated with violent earthquakes and explosive volcanoes
Earthquake
A sudden or violent movement within the Earth’s crust followed by a series of shocks
Immediate responses
The reactions of people as a disaster happens and in the immediate aftermath
Long-term responses
Later reactions that occur in the weeks, months and years after an event
Monitoring
Recording physical changes, such as earthquake tremors around a volcano, to help forecast when and where a natural hazard might strike
Plate margin
The margin or boundary between two tectonic plates
Planning
Actions taken to enable communities to respond to, and recover from, natural disasters, through measures such as emergency evacuation plans, information management etc.
Prediction
Attempts to forecast when and where a natural hazard will strike, based on current knowledge. This can be done to some extent for volcanic eruptions, but less reliably for earthquakes
Primary effects
The initial impacts of a natural event on people and property, caused directly by it; for instance, buildings collapsing following an earthquake
Protection
Actions taken before a hazard strikes to reduce its impact, such as educating people or improving building design
Secondary effect
The after-effects that occur, sometimes on a longer timescale, for instance, fires due to ruptured gas mains resulting from the ground shaking
Tectonic hazard
A natural hazard caused by movement of tectonic plates
Tectonic plates
A rigid segment of the Earth’s crust which can ‘float’ across the heavier, semi-molten rock below. Continental Plates - less dense but thicker than Oceans plates
Volcano
An opening in the Earth’s crust from which lava, ash and gases erupt
Atmospheric hazards
Created in the atmosphere, by the movement of air and water
Examples of atmospheric hazards
Tropical storms, extreme weather (heat waves, cold spells), storm surge
Terrestrial/Geological hazards
Created by the movement of the Earth’s tectonic plates or surface rock and soils
Examples of Geological hazards
Volcanoes, earthquakes, landslides, avalanches, tsunamis
Water based hazards
Created by rivers, sea or oceans
Convection Currents
The hot core causes magma to rise in the mantle and sink towards the core when it cools, convection builds pressure and it carries plates with it
Slab pull
The denser plate sinks back in the mantle under the influence of gravity, it pulls the rest of the plate along behind it
Ridge push
Magma rises as the plates move apart, the magma cools to form a new plate material, as it cools it becomes denser and slides down away from the ridge, this causes tectonic plates to move away from each other
Volcanic gases
These are compressed underground but once released into the atmosphere they can change global temperatures. Some gases like CO₂ are fatal in high concentrations when ejected from volcanoes
Landslides
This is when a section of the volcano falls down the side of a mountain
Lahar
These are a mixture of volcano ash rocks and other debris mixed with either hot or cold water. They can destroy whole towns and many move fast for people to out run
Lava Flows
These are eruptions of molten rock from deep within the Earth. Some are slow and sticky others are runny and fast flowing. They can burn down buildings and cause widespread destruction
Pyroclastic flows
These are mixtures of hot, dry ash, rock and gas from volcanic eruptions. They travel about 80km per hour and range from 200-700°C
Tephra
This is anything that is blown out of the volcano into the air. It can vary in size from tiny ash particles to chunks of rocks the size of cars
Jökulhlaup
A glacial outburst, when a glacier that is on top of a volcano melts due to a volcanic eruption