Natural Hazards (after q39 you use the answer to think of the question) Flashcards
What is the inner core made of?
Iron and nickel
What is an example of a destructive plate boundary?
Eurasian to india (nepal)
What is an example of a constructive plate boundary?
The mid Atlantic ridge: the Eurasian plate and the North American plate are moving apart
ICELAND
What is an example of a conservative plate boundary?
The Pacific plate is moving faster but in the same direction as the North American plate on the west coast of the USA (i.e. the San Andreas fault)
What is an example of a collisional plate boundary?
The Indian plate and the Eurasian plate are colliding to form the Himalayas
What is the Richter scale?
A measurement for the amount of energy released by an earthquake. It doesn’t have an upper limit and it is logarithmic (a 5 is 10x more powerful than a 4)
What is a hotspot?
An area where the mantle is really hot so volcanoes form even though it may not be a plate boundary (i.e. Hawaii)
What are the primary impacts of earthquakes? List 6
Collapsing buildings and bridges People injured or killed by debris Infrastructure damaged - roads, railways, ports and airports Electricity cables damaged Telephone poles destroyed Underground sewage systems damaged
What are the secondary impacts of earthquakes? List 8
Landslides
Tsunamis
Leaking gas ignited - fires
People left homeless
Physiological problems
Lack of sanitation and limited water supply - diseases spread
Difficult to get emergency vehicles through
Businesses damaged - unemployment - negative multiplier effect
Why are the impacts of earthquakes more severe in LEDCs? Explain 4
Poor quality housing is destroyed more easily
Poorer infrastructure makes it harder to distribute aid
They don’t have much money to protect themselves or to react quickly
Healthcare is often worse so people die from treatable injuries if there aren’t enough supplies
Why do people live in places where earthquakes happen?
They have friends and family there
They are employed in the area
They are confident of government support
People don’t think severe earthquakes will happen again
How can you reduce the impacts of earthquakes? Explain 5
Prediction - use previous data, detect tremors
Building techniques - reinforced concrete, energy absorbing foundations
Planning - fire breaks, training emergency services, plan evacuation routes, avoid building on prone areas
Education - how to evacuate, how to make a survival kit
Aid - from governments or organisations
Why do people choose to live near volcanoes? List 3
Fertile soil from minerals from ash and lava
Tourist attraction - boosts local economy, jobs available
Source of geothermal energy
What are the primary impacts of volcanic eruptions? List 5
Buildings and roads are destroyed by lava and pyroclastic flow
People are killed by falling rocks and pyroclastic flows
Crops are damaged
Water supplies are contaminated
People, animals and plants are suffocated by gases
What are the secondary impacts of volcanoes? List 8
Lahars - flooding, more deaths, injuries
Fires
Psychological impacts
People left homeless
Shortage of food from damaged crops
Roads blocked so aid is hard to distribute
Businesses are damaged leading to unemployment
Sulphur dioxide released causes acid rain