natural hazards

Cards (15)

  • Natural hazards

    Environmental events threatening people
  • Natural disasters occur where death and destruction result
  • As populations grow, so does hazard risk
  • Factors that increase risk
    • Urbanisation - densely populated urban areas concentrate those at risk
    • Poverty - expense of housing leads to building on risky ground
    • Farming - attraction of nutrient-rich floodplains puts people at risk
    • Climate change - global warming raises sea levels and generates more extreme weather
  • Hazard risk
    The chance of being affected by a natural hazard
  • Tectonic plates
    • Driven by convection currents within the Earth's mantle
    • Plates move apart at constructive margins, causing mid-ocean ridges and volcanic eruptions
    • Plates move towards each other at destructive margins, causing subduction, earthquakes, volcanic eruptions and fold mountains
    • Plates slide past each other at conservative margins, causing earthquakes
  • Constructive plate margin
    Plates separate, magma rises to the surface, breaking the crust and causing mid-ocean earthquakes and volcanic eruptions
  • Destructive plate margin
    Plates move towards each other, one plate is forced under the other, causing subduction, earthquakes, volcanic eruptions and fold mountains
  • Conservative (transform) plate margin

    Plates slide past each other, friction builds stress and triggers earthquakes when they slip
  • Earthquakes and volcanoes occur at plate margins
  • More earthquakes occur than volcanic eruptions
  • Earthquakes have primary and secondary effects
    Primary effects include damage to buildings and infrastructure, power and communications cuts, communities cut off. Secondary effects include fires, landslides, flooding, and long-term impacts on the economy and society.
  • Plate margins run through densely populated regions such as Japan and southern Europe
  • Strategies to reduce risk from tectonic hazards
    • Monitoring - detecting precursors to volcanic eruptions and earthquakes
    • Prediction - using monitoring data to forecast events, though earthquake prediction remains difficult
    • Protection - earthquake-resistant construction, diverting lava flows
    • Planning - risk assessment, hazard mapping, evacuation planning
  • Iceland benefits from its location on a plate margin, with geothermal power and a tourism industry based on its dramatic landscapes