Chapter 6
Chapter 6
★ Natural hazard is a naturally occurring event that will have a negative impact on
people
★ Natural disaster is when a natural hazard causes damage and people affected are
unable to cope
★ Geological hazards include earthquakes and volcanic eruptions
★ Climatic hazards include droughts, tropical cyclones, floods
★ Plate tectonics is a theory developed in the 1960s that helps explain the formation of
some of the important features on the earth’s surface and how continents move
Younger Older
It can sink and continually being renewed It can not sink and is neither destroyed or
and destroyed renewed
Plate boundaries
- The largest plates are Antarctic, Eurasian and North American
- Plates can be continental or oceanic
➢ Plate boundary is where two or more plates meet, the three main types of plate
boundary are constructive, destructive and conservative
➢ Convection currents are the transfer of heat from place to place, denser colder
fluid sinks into warmer areas, heat from the Earth's core causes convection
currents in the mantle
Constructive (divergent)
- Two plates move away from each other
- When two oceanic plates move away, magma rises to
the surface (convection current) and solidifies when it
comes in contact with cold ocean water
- The magma turns to lava and forms a new basaltic
ocean crust
- They can also form shields or basic volcanoes
(submarines) and have non-explosive eruptions
- This is known as sea-floor spreading or ridge push
- Small Earthquakes are triggered
- If two continental plates move away from each other, a rift valley may form
Destructive (converging)
- Two plates move towards each other
- When an oceanic plate and continental plate move
towards each other, the denser (oceanic) plate is
forced down (subducted) under the lighter
(continental) plate
- This happens in the subduction zone and an ocean
trench is formed
- The friction between the plates triggers Earthquakes
- The heat produced due to friction turns the descending plate into magma
- The magma starts to rise and erupt (due to pressure) through a weakness in the crust
as an explosive composite volcano
- Fold mountains are also formed
- The magma that erupts at the surface forms a chain of volcanic islands called an
island arc
- If two continental plates move towards
each other, the sediments between the
two plates are compressed (collision
zone) and pushed upwards to form fold
mountains
- Earthquakes occur, but no volcanic
activity as there’s no subduction of
oceanic plate
Conservative
- Two plates slide past each other
- They move in different speeds
- The plates get locked together and pressure
builds up until it is released as an earthquake
★ Tropical cyclones are large areas of very low pressure with wind speeds of of over
119 km h^-1
- They are categorised using a Saffir Simpson scale hurricane wind scale
★ Flooding is when the discharge of a river exceeds the capacity of the rivers channel
- When this occurs, the river overflows the banks and covers the adjacent floodplain
Effects of La Niña
- La Niña causes the temperature of the water along South America to decrease
- The cooler conditions cause droughts in parts of North and South America
Climate change
- Warmer worldwide temperature cause the rainfall to decrease in some parts of the
world, leading to a drought
Agricultural practice
- It can make land more vulnerable to a drought
- Irrigation techniques have increased farmers reliance on water
- Over Cultivation and overgrazing can lead to soil compaction, and the soil is less able
to hold water
Deforestation
- Lack of trees can decrease soil infiltration and increase soil erosion
Building a dam
- Building one on a large river can cause a drought, downstream of the dam by reducing
the flow of water
6.6 - Impacts of natural hazards
Impact of Drought
- Water sources dry up, forcing people to travel long distances to fetch water
- Decline in crop yields
- Loss of crops, livestock, plants and wildlife
- Decrease in land prices as production declines and farmers lose money
- Migration from rural to urban areas
- Unemployment
- Increase in food prices
- Health problems due to malnutrition
- Soil erosion, leading to desertification
- Increased risk of wildfires and poor air quality
- Conflicts over water usage and food
Impact of flooding
- Loss of life
- Contamination of water supplies leading to disease
- Loss of crops and livestock leading to food shortages
- Financial losses when repairing the damage
- Deposition of silt from flood waters
6.7 - Strategies to manage impact of natural hazards
Earthquakes
Volcanoes
Tropical cyclones
Flooding
Drought