Physical case studies (up to phllippines)

    Cards (68)

    • Greenland and Antarctica lose 100 billion metric tonnes of ice per year, which has raised sea levels by 7/10 of an inch
    • Greenland
      • 1 mile thick
    • Antarctica
      • 3 miles thick
    • Together Greenland and Antarctica hold 70% of the world's freshwater
    • The River Don and EA Beck in South Yorkshire burst their banks due to peat removal, burnt moorland and course drainage
    • 500 homes were flooded and 1000 homes evacuated in the South Yorkshire floods
    • 60 new protection methods were implemented after the South Yorkshire floods
    • The amount of rain in the UK has increased by 17% in the past decade
    • The Amazon rainforest covers 40% of South America
    • The Amazon rainforest is home to 20 million species
    • The Amazon rainforest receives 2300mm of rainfall per year
    • 30% of human (anthropogenic) carbon emissions are from rainforest burning
    • In 1970, deforestation caused an 18 day delay in the onset of the rainy season in the Amazon
    • Wood is 50% carbon, so releases a lot when burnt
    • 27% of the Amazon will be without trees by 2030
    • 75% of rainfall in the Amazon is intercepted by trees
    • REDLACH
      Rational resource use
    • TARAPOTO
      Forest growth/development
    • The Amazon Cooperation Treaty (1995) was for cooperation, sustainability and well-being of natives
    • Indonesia is the 3rd largest emitter of greenhouse gases and 85% of their emissions are derived from rainforest and peatland loss
    • There is high demand for paper, plywood and palm oil, leading to deforestation in Indonesia
    • Fires from 1997-1998 burnt 8 million hectares of forest in Indonesia
    • In 2015, 10,000 fires raged across the islands of Indonesia
    • During the last ice age (Pleistocene), ice covered 33% of the Earth's surface
    • Flamborough Head is a chank headland with lots of chemical erosion
    • The Holderness coastline erodes at an average of 1.2 metres per year due to narrow beaches, unconsolidated sediment, and boulder clay
    • Holmpton erodes the fastest at 5 metres+ per year
    • Spurn Point is a 6km long spit
    • Most waves are destructive and erode the Holderness coastline
    • Hornsea is a coastal resort where the shoreline management plan is to 'hold the line'
    • Cowden is a small settlement where the shoreline management plan is to 'do nothing'
    • Withernsea has a £6.3 million sea wall that is 2.2km long with rock armour
    • Hornsea has 1.8km long groynes
    • The Sundarbans coastal zone extends over 10,000 km2 and is formed by sediment deposits from the Ganges, Brahmaputra and Indus rivers
    • The Sundarbans is located in the Bay of Bengal and forms an ecosystem of forest and swamps
    • Tidal action forms long channels (Kahls) that drain the land in the Sundarbans
    • Monsoon winds blow sand into dunes in the Sundarbans, while finer silts wash into the bay and form islands
    • Vegetation succession forms dense mangrove forests in the Sundarbans, which are home to 180 Bengal tigers
    • The Sundarbans acts as a protective barrier against floods for people living in Khulna and the port of Mongla
    • The Sundarbans coast is retreating by 200m per year
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