River management Flashcards

1
Q

Dams and resevoirs

A

Dams are barriers built across the rivers, usually in the upper course
A reservoir (artificial lake) is formed behind the dam

+ Reservoirs store water (e.g after heavy rain), control water flow and prevent floods downstream.
They also can be used to generate hydroelectric power

  • Dams are very expensive to build. Creating a reservoir canflood existing settlements.
    Material is deposited in the reservoir not along river course, so farmland downstream can become less fertile
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2
Q

Channel straightening

A

Meanders are removed by buildings straighter artificial channels

+ Water leaves the area more quickly rather than building up,so flood risk is lower

  • Flooding may happen downstrean instead.
    Faster moving water may cause more erosion downstream.
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3
Q

Embankments

A

Raised walls are built along river banks

+ The rivers can hold more water, so floods are less frequent

  • They’re quite expensive, and there’s a risk of severe flooding if the water rises above the level of the embankments or if they break
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4
Q

Flood relief channel

A

Channels are built to divert water around built-up areas or to divert excess water if the river level gets too high

+ Gates on the channels means the release of water can be controlled reducing flooding risk

  • There will be increased discharge where the relief channel rejoins the river (or joins another river), which could cause flooding in that area
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5
Q

Flood warnings and prepartion

A

The environmental agency issues flood warnings through various media (e.g. TV, radio, internet) Buildings are modified to minimise flood damge.
Residents can prepare sandbags and flood boards prior to floods

+ Warnings give people time to move possestions upstairs, put sandbags in place or evacuate. This reduces the impact of flooding

  • Warning don’t prevent floods. People may not have access to warnings and modifying buildings is expensive. Preperation doesn’t guarntee safety from flood and give people a false sense of security
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6
Q

Flood plain zoning

A

Restrictions prevent buildings on parts of a flood plain that are likely to be affected by a flood

+ Flood risk is reduced-fewer impermeable surfaces are created (e.g roads). The impact of flooding is also reduced - there are no buildings to damage

  • The expansion of an urban area is limited if there aren’t any other suitable building sites. It can’t help in areas with existing buildings
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7
Q

Planting trees

A

Planting trees in the river valley increases the interception of rainwater (and lag time).

+ Discharge and flood risk decrease. Vegetaion reduces soil erosion in the valley and provides habitats for wild life

  • Less land is avaliable for farming
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8
Q

River restoration

A

Making the river more natural e.g. by removing man-made levees, so that the flood plain can flood naturally.

+ Discharge is reduced, so there’s less risk of flooding downstream. Little maintanence is neededandthere are better habitats for wildlife

  • Local flood risk can increase, especially if nothing is done to prevent major flooding
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