Geography Notes
Geography Notes
1.0 Rivers
Where did the river come from?
The river comes from the water cycle. The water cycle is always moving on and
endless journey. The water cycle produces all the rain and snow on Earth, and it
allows us to use the same water repeatedly.
Here are the ways of water cycle works:
1. The water cycle is driven by the sun’s energy. When the sun warms the
water in the oceans, seas, rivers, lakes and the wet surface of the land, the
water evaporates and turns into invisible gas called water vapors. The sun’s
warmth and the wind blowing over the oceans and seas turn large amounts
of water into water vapors all the time.
2. The water vapor rises into the air.
3. High in the sky, the air is cold, the water vapors cools and condenses. This
means that it turns from a gas into tiny droplets of water. These are so small
and light that they float around the air and form clouds.
4. When the water droplets get colder, such as when the clouds rise over a
mountain, the tiny droplets of water join together to form a bigger droplets
that fall to the ground as ‘rain’.
5. When the air is very cold, the tiny droplets of water in the clouds may turn
into ice crystals, which join together and fall to the ground as ‘snowflakes’.
6. The water in the rain and snow that falls on the land eventually flows back
into the rivers, which flow downhill to the ocean or sea.
Where rivers begin?
A river’s source is its starting point. The main types of river source are:
Rain and melted snow: When rain falls or snow melts, some of the water
flows over the surface of the land and forms tiny streams. These streams
may join up to form rivers. The rivers flow downhill until they reach an
ocean or a sea.
Springs: Some of the water from rain or melted snow soaks into the soil. It
passes through PERMEABLE rocks until it reaches a layer of
IMPERMEABLE rock that will not let the water pass through it.
(Permeable rocks are soft rocks that allow water to pass through while
impermeable rocks are hard rocks that don’t allow water to pass
through)
Lakes and glaciers: A few rivers have a lake as their source. Other rivers in
high mountains areas start at the edges of melting glaciers.
Near its source, a river is usually high above sea level, and it flows very fast
downhill.
Erosion:
All rivers have sand and pieces of rock that are carried along by the water. The
moving water, and the sand and rocks, bump and rub against the rocks on the
bottom and sides of the river, and slowly wear them away. This is called ‘Erosion’.
Erosion causes the river to slowly form a V-shaped valley.
What is a floodplain?
After heavy rain, or snow has melted, a river sometimes floods the nearby land.
When the floodwater has gone, the land is covered by find mud DEPOSITED by
the river. When this flooding and deposition repeated thousands of times over
many years, it forms a large, flat area called floodplain.
Irrigation:
The soil of the Murray River VALLEY are dry but fertile. More than 400 000
hectares of land in the valley are irrigated by water from the Snowy River Dams.
Grapes, oranges, grapefruit, cereals, and many other crops are also grown.
Because so much water is taken from the Murray River for irrigation, there is far
less water flowing in it than there used to be. A lot of water is left behind
evaporates in the heat of the Sun, which makes the water salty. Salty water is not
good for drinking or irrigation.
Some of the water used to irrigate crops also evaporates from the soil, leaving a
hard layer of salt on the surface of the soil in which it is difficult to grow crops.
Polluted rivers:
Many villagers, towns and cities were built near rivers so that people could make
use of the water. The water that people return to the river after they have used it
often contains harmful substances that pollute the river.
Acid rain:
When fuels, such as coal, oil and petrol, are burned in factories, power stations and
motor vehicles they let Sulphur dioxide and other gases into the air. These gases
dissolve in droplets of moisture in the atmosphere and form droplets of acid rain.
Acid rain will eventually fall to the ground, sometimes hundreds of kilometers
from where the gases were released. Acid rain kills fish and other wildlife in rivers
and lakes. It also kills trees, damages crops and erodes stone buildings.
Preventing river pollution:
Many people and the government are worried about river pollution and are trying
to do something to prevent it.
Some ways to prevent river pollution are:
Having strict laws that make it illegal to pollute the rivers.
Making factories remove harmful substances from their wastewater before
they let it flow into rivers.
Making factories and mines pay to clean up rivers if they pollute them.
Treating sewage to make it safe before the wastewater is returned to a river
Having laws to reduce the amount of air pollution released by factories,
power stations and motor vehicles in order to reduce acid rain.
The river Thames:
The river Thames has always supplied most of London’s water. But by the late
1950s the Thames was so polluted that it was black in color, and it smelled very
horrible. The main causes of pollution were sewage that was allowed to flow
straight into the river and oil from ships using the river. The government took
action to clean up the Thames.
Today, the river Thames is much cleaner for two main reasons:
London’s old docks were closed because large modern ships could not use
them. A new port was built near the mouth of the river where it is deeper and
wider.
New sewage works were built and all wastewater from homes, business and
factories has to be treated instead of being straight into river.
Now birds, fish and other wildlife are returning to the river Thames. Clean rivers
are important because they show that the environment is healthy.
Fun fact: The river we pollute today, may be the water we drink tomorrow.
Mountains:
MOUNTAINS and hills are areas of high ground. If the ground rises more than
300 meters above the land around it, it is called a mountain. If it rises less than
300 meters, it is called a hill.
Contour lines:
Contour lines are lines joining places that are the same height above sea level.
They are exactly level; they do not cross each other and if they seem to join up or
stop it is because they have reached a cliff or some other vertical surface.