Flood management.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Bangladesh flooding Project By Tara and Alex. When? Where?
Advertisements

RIVER DRAINAGE BASINS.
Managing Flooding Hard and Soft Engineering LO: to understand the types of hard and soft engineering used to control rivers and the advantages and disadvantages.
Management of future floods at Cockermouth LO: To be able to explain how a specific riverine area has been managed.
The Causes,Effects and Management of Flooding in Loughton
Surface Water Streams and Rivers Stream Erosion and Deposition
Section 3: Stream Deposition
Hydrograph Interpretation.
River Hydrographs Why do we use hydrographs?
The Hydrologic (Water) Cycle. Surface Water Oceans Rivers and streams Lakes and ponds Springs – groundwater becomes surface water.
Chapter 6.2 The Work of Streams.
Flood management. Flood Management Floods occur when discharge exceeds bankfull capacity. Water leaves channel to cover adjacent land – the flood plain.
Chapter 13 Surface Water.
Alluvial Fan 8-7 Delta.
Exeter 8/12/00.
FLOODS A. Ramdial. INTRODUCTION Floods are a natural river process in response to changes in drainage basin inputs (precipitation / melt-water runoff)
Flooding New Orleans, Aug Flooding –Varies with intensity and amount of rainfall –Perhaps the most universally experienced natural hazard Flood.
Chapter 16: Running Water. Hydrologic cycle The hydrologic cycle is a summary of the circulation of Earth’s water supply Processes involved in the hydrologic.
Floods Week 4. Questions for Homework & Discussion  Would you live in a flood-prone area?)  What level of risk from flooding is acceptable to you? 
Floodplains BY Rebecca Hinks & Charlotte Bootherstone.
Streams and Flooding Chapter 6  Water shapes the earth’s surface  Water also plays a role in human affairs  Floods are the most widely experienced catastrophic.
Streams and Flooding Chapter 6 Water shapes the earth’s surface
13 Surface Water 13.1 Streams and Rivers
Pgs Learning Objective and Learning Outcomes Learning Objective: To understand the causes, effects and management of river flooding Learning Outcomes:
 This will occur when streams receive more water than their channels can hold,  i.e. when stream discharge is greater than stream capacity.  Streams.
Stream Erosion and Transport
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Running Water Earth, 10e - Chapter 16.
Presented by: Stephen Scott How has the UK flood management programme changed over the years? What does the future hold?
Prevention and Cure. Contents Introduction to Reservoirs Preventing Siltation Cure Cost Benefit Analysis Conclusion.
Warmup How many river basins are in North Carolina? Which two river basins border Apex? Write two facts about your river basin from Friday.
Meandering Rivers WHAT IS A MEANDER?. Formation of Meanders.
Describe the features and characteristics of the Three Gorges Dam.
The water cycle. The drainage basin river evapotranspiration precipitation throughflow surface runoff groundwater flow water table interception percolation.
Section 3: Stream Deposition
Label: Source Mouth Tributary Meander Vertical erosion Lateral erosion Can you mark on the meander where deposition and erosion would take place? Draw.
Journal #5 What is a flood? Why are floods harmful? What can humans do to prevent floods?
Unit 3 Vocabulary The Hydrosphere. 1.Water Cycle - the unending circulation of Earth’s water supply. 2.Infiltration - the movement of surface water into.
(b)Study Figure 2 which is an extract from a news website about the cause of floods in Pakistan in August With the help of Figure 2 explain why.
Floods Hard and Soft Engineering Lo; to understand the sustainability of differing flood protection methods.
FLOODS IN REPUBLIC OF GEORGIA June 13-15, 2015 Walter Hays, Global Alliance for Disaster Reduction, Vienna, Virginia, USA Walter Hays, Global Alliance.
What are the management challenges associated with the development of river landscapes? Managing river landscapes is often about balancing socio-economic.
What are the problems of managing a river? Socio-economic and environmental needs?
Objectives..describe and explain hard and soft flood prevention strategies Page GCSE Geography AQA A.
a) Water stored in the rocks below ground
River flooding LS: Explain the soft and hard strategies of reducing flood risk. Write a case study for a flood event in an MEDC and LEDC and explain the.
Resource 1 Preparation. Where are we looking at? Drainage basin ADrainage basin B.
Which flood? Boscastle 2004 Bangladesh 2004 Slow onset Flood
Flood Hydrographs How do we know if a river will flood?
Construction Analysis Hydrographs
STREAMS & RIVERS Chapter 6 1.
Marium, Alex, Billy, Ollie
Why do people try to manage rivers?.
HIGHER GEOGRAPHY Hydrosphere - Hydrographs.
River Conwy - flood management
Physical Landscapes in the UK - River Landscapes
Warm-up What are four things that impact INFILTRATION? (the answer is in your notes) After you finish the warm-up put your river basin project in the inbox.
What runs but never walks, Has a mouth but never talks, Has a bed but never sleeps, Has a head but never weeps?
EARTH SCIENCE KESSEL.
2.3.2a Water Cycle, Surface Water, and Ground Water
Section 1: Surface Water Movement
Water Vocab.
Warmup How many river basins are in North Carolina?
Natural and Man-made features
Flood defences.
Managing River Floods Natural Physical Causes of Floods
Definition of Floods Flood: Overflows of large amounts of water onto land that is normally dry. Coastal flood: Happens near a coast River flood: River.
Today we are learning this content:
Surpluses in the hydrological cycle
Presentation transcript:

Flood management

Flood Management Floods occur when discharge exceeds bankfull capacity. Water leaves channel to cover adjacent land – the flood plain. Human occupancy of this flood zone creates need for hazard response.

Recurrence intervals This refers to the frequency with which a particular flood height can be expected to return. Established from past records. Formula: Recurrence interval = nº of peaks in list + 1 ranked position of discharge x

Human Impact on Run-off and flooding Most activity tends to increase flood risk, by reducing the interception store and thus increasing the amount of surface run-off: Deforestation Urbanisation Cultivation Whereas afforestation reduces the flood risk by encouraging infiltration.

Human response to Flooding: Flood protection – decreases risk of bankfull capacity being exceeded Flood abatement – reduces stormflow and reduces peak discharge levels Behavioural responses – societies adopt different coping strategies

Human response to Flooding: Flood Protection Modification to channel or banks: Bank raising and dredging both increase bankfull capacity By increasing the hydraulic radius, channels also become more efficient (velocity increases and so water levels drop) Widely used (e.g. Mississippi – 3000 kms of raised levées – up to 15 m high)

Human response to Flooding: Flood Protection Artificial channel linings: Concrete lined channels create smoother wetted perimeter and so increase velocity Thus water levels drop and flood risk is reduced Expensive, and high maintenance E.g. Los Angeles

Human response to Flooding: Flood Protection 3. Dam construction: Multi-purpose, but key tool for flood protection Controlled release of water stored in reservoir through sluice gates can spread discharge over a longer period (reducing peak flows) Effectiveness depends on relative scale of reservoir’s catchment area to that of the whole drainage basin Geo-politics can cause problems – e.g. India and Bangladesh (Ganges), Spain and Portugal (Tagus), Zimbabwe and Mozambique (Limpopo and Floods of 2000)

Human response to Flooding: Flood Protection 4. Flood relief channels: effectively increases bankfull capacity and diverts flow away from high impact zones requires there to be space on floodplains to skirt around high impact zones, so not always possible e.g. River Exe at Exeter, River Thames at Windsor

Human response to Flooding: Flood Protection 5. Spreading grounds: Diverting flood water to low impact flood plain zones, for storage Reduces downstream peak flows Low impact zones can be recreational land use Flood water will evaporate or eventually infiltrate, replenishing groundwater supplies E.g. Los Angeles basin

Human response to Flooding: Flood Protection 6. Debris dams: To trap sediment in upper catchments to prevent downstream bed aggradation Maintains higher bankfull capacities downstream Periodic need for emptying, but can be used for construction materials Especially important in semi-arid, mountainous catchments E.g. Los Angeles Basin

Human response to Flooding: Flood Protection Straightening of sinuous rivers: Increases gradient → increases flow rates Thus water levels drop and flood risk is reduced Also reduces deposition and averts bed aggradation Also keeps channels navigable

Human response to Flooding: Flood Abatement Tackles problem at source by reducing surface run-off. Achieved by: Afforestation or reforestation of upper catchment slopes (e.g. River Exe) Comprehensive protection of vegetation Terracing of farmland Contour ploughing

Human response to Flooding: Behavioural responses Accepting the loss – fatalism often only option in countries like Haiti or Bangladesh Public relief funds – emergency response to hazard event requires funding, materials, technical support, rebuilding. Sources vary from UN agencies to governments and NGO’s Flood insurance – a standard response in flood prone communities in the North

Human response to Flooding: Behavioural responses Monitoring and Prediction – data on rainfall and stream discharge can be used to produce accurate predictions of the timing of flood surges Can be used for communities to prepare for actual flood event or for authorities to organise evacuations Not always possible – flash floods have too short a lag time (e.g. Boscastle, Devon, U.K., 2004), lack of technical equipment / personnel (Haiti, 2004), or communication systems (Bangladesh, 2004)

Human response to Flooding: Behavioural responses Floodplain zoning Planning authorities can prohibit certain land-uses in the more flood prone floodplain zones Flood proofing Individuals bear responsibility for reducing likely flood damage to property Techniques: water-proof garden walls, windows and doors; sandbags; buildings on stilts; removal of damageable goods to higher levels.