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Lesson 1 Further Notes - Meaning and Types of Natural Hazards

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Lesson 1 Further Notes - Meaning and Types of Natural Hazards

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muthamanicholus2
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What is a Natural Hazard?

A natural hazard is a ​naturally occurring event ​that is a threat to a ​population​. Natural hazards
negatively affect a population by causing loss of life​, ​injuries​, and ​damage to important
infrastructure​ that people rely on.

An example of a natural hazard is the severe earthquake that hit Nepal in April 2015. This
earthquake killed nearly 9000 people, injured thousands and destroyed many homes. This natural
event had a​ huge negative social impact​, meaning it is classed as a ​natural hazard​.

The effects of the Nepal 2015 earthquake can be seen here. ​(Source: ​www.worldvision.org​/ Photo by
Theodore Sam)

What is the difference between a hazard and an event?


A natural event can only be classed as a ​natural hazard when there is a threat to ​people​. For
example, if there was a ​volcano ​or an ​earthquake ​on a desert island with no people on it, it would
not be classed as a natural hazard as ​there is no threat to human life or property​. This concept
is illustrated in the diagram below:

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Types of Natural Hazard
There are​ many different types of natural hazards​, but in general they can be divided into ​
3 main groups​:

Geological hazards: ​Hazards caused by processes on the land.

For example:

​Volcanoes Earthquakes Landslides Mudflows

​Hydrological hazards: ​Hazards caused by the movement of water on


the land.
For example:

Flooding

Atmospheric hazards: ​Hazards caused by the weather.

For example:

Tropical storms Tornadoes Droughts

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Hazard Risk

What is Hazard Risk?


Hazard risk is the ​probability ​(i.e. the likelihood or the chance) that a natural hazard will actually
affect a population​.

The ​risk ​a hazard poses is dependent on a population’s ​exposure to the hazard as well as the
population’s ​vulnerability to the hazard​. If a population is more exposed to a hazard​, then the
hazard risk is higher​. For example, if someone lives next to an active volcano​, they are at
higher risk​ than someone who lives​ 100 miles away from the active volcano​.

If a population is more ​vulnerable ​to the hazard (meaning they lack the resources to deal with the
effects of a hazard) the risk is also higher. For example, if a population has poor access to
healthcare or rescue services, they are at a​ higher risk​ of the hazard affecting the population.

Hazard risk is affected by different ​social, environmental and economic ​factors:

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