1 / 22

What are the effects of floods?

What are the effects of floods?. Steep gradient. Increase speed of run off. Water reaches the river quicker. STARTER: create a cause flow diagram like this…. Flashy hydrograph. http://www.bbc.co.uk/learningzone/clips/why-did-boscastle-flood/14072.html. Boscastle 2004.

hadar
Download Presentation

What are the effects of floods?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. What are the effects of floods? Steep gradient Increase speed of run off Water reaches the river quicker STARTER: create a cause flow diagram like this…. Flashy hydrograph

  2. http://www.bbc.co.uk/learningzone/clips/why-did-boscastle-flood/14072.htmlhttp://www.bbc.co.uk/learningzone/clips/why-did-boscastle-flood/14072.html

  3. Boscastle 2004 • Read through the sheet • Follow the activities

  4. Homework Due Tuesday • Complete qs 1 to 4 NOT 5 on the sheet • Draw a diagram of the Hydrological Cycle (water cycle) in your book • NEXT FRIDAY YOU WILL DO A RIVERS PAPER

  5. KEY DATES DATA TIMES KEY TERMS

  6. http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/education/teens/case-studies/boscastlehttp://www.metoffice.gov.uk/education/teens/case-studies/boscastle

  7. Where is Boscastle? A small town on the north coast of Cornwall. 30 kms north west of Plymouth.

  8. CAUSE 1: VERY HEAVY RAIN Most of the rain fell in a five hour periodPeak intensities were in excess of 30mm/hr (0.5mm per minute) A month’s rain fell in just 2 hours

  9. Studies of extreme rainfall patterns have concluded that freak floods are more likely to occur in June, July and August than at any other month of the year. This is when atmospheric conditions, such as a warm ground surface, lead to the uplift of air masses which subsequently cool, producing cloud and rainfall formations. At midday, on the 16th August 2004, heavy, thundery showers had developed across the South West, these were the remnants of Hurricane Alex which had crossed the Atlantic. Bands of showers aligned themselves with winds that had converged along the coastal high ground around Boscastle, creating Cumulonimbus clouds 12192m (40,000ft) high and kept them stationary for many hours.

  10. CAUSE 2: THE STEEP SIDED VALLEYS It has been estimated that the Boscastle valley’s catchment area exceeds 23sq kms spanning inland to Bodmin Moor where many small rivers spring. The steep sided valleys that converge down to the sea, known in the trade as “flashy catchments”, act as huge funnels and can produce true flash floods after a sudden cloudburst or prolonged heavy rainfall. River Valency River Jordan Bodmin Moor

  11. CAUSE 3 – SLATEY IMPERMEABLE ROCKS with CLAY SOILS • The cause was the combination of • intense convectional rain, • local topography and • the geology • = resulting in a flash flood no one could have predicted.

  12. Cause 4 The site of Boscastle? The harbour area is on low ground beside the sea and on the flood plain of two rivers.

  13. What happened? 12.15 Rain gauge at nearby Lesnewth some 4km (2½ miles) up the valley, shows no rainfall and it is dry in Boscastle’s harbour area, yet there are torrential showers at Camelford and at the top of Boscastle.

  14. 15.30 River Valency begins to break its banks Cars swept away Cars were swept out to sea, bridges were washed away and people clung to rooftops and trees for safety as torrential rain hit the area. Emergency workers mounted a huge operation to rescue residents and holidaymakers along a 32-km (20-mile) stretch of the north Cornwall coast around Boscastle.

  15. 16.00 a 3 metre wall of water runs through Boscastle car park at 40 mph.

  16. 17.00 Rescue Helicopters. In an operation lasting from mid-afternoon until 2:30 AM, a fleet of seven helicopters rescued about 150 people clinging to trees and the roofs of buildings and cars. Amazingly, no major injuries or loss of life were reported. 55 residents were airlifted out by the Royal Air Force after the flooding, 35 BBC staff were flown in by other means.

  17. Aftermath – short term rescue and clear up

  18. Medium Term : Effect on tourism About 90% of Boscastle’s economy is dependent on tourism. After the flood, more than 20 accommodation providers were forced to shut, many of them individually owned bed and breakfasts. As about two thirds of the business is done during the six week school holiday, the effects were even more devastating with half the three weeks remaining.

  19. The timing of disasters such as that in Boscastle is important. As this happened during the day people were awake and could be rescued by the emergency services. If it had happened during the night most people would have been asleep and there would have been a higher likelihood of injuries or even deaths.

  20. Create a flow diagram like the one with the causes for the effects 20 accommodation providers had to close 90% of the economy is based on tourism Loss of income over summer months

  21. Homework • Draw a detailed diagram of the hydrological cycle with the different overland, through flow …. • As well as interception, evapotranspiration

  22. Jssppt?

More Related