Geography paper 1

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Last updated 5:24 PM on 1/8/23
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149 Terms

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Natural Hazard
Any natural process that is a potential threat to human life and property
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Factors affecting hazard risk
Urbanisation, poverty, development, climate change
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Constructive plates
Two plates move apart, magma forces way along gap and causes earthquake, erupted lava cools and forms volcano
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Ecotourism
The practice of using an area's natural environment to attract tourists which is sustainable and won't damage area
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Destructive plate
Two plates moving towards one another, oceanic plate subducts under continental plate and friction causes melting of oceanic plate, triggers earthquake
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Conservative plate
Two plates moving alongside, friction can send shockwaves causing earthquakes
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Where are volcanoes distributed?
Coastline and tectonic plate boundaries
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Where are earthquakes distributed?
Coastline and tectonic plate boundaries
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Chile HIC earthquake
27th feb 2010, 8.8 Richter scale, caused on destructive plate margin
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primary effects of chile

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PE- 5000 deaths, Santiago airport damaged
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secondary effects of chile

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SE- 1500km road damaged by landslide
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immediate responses chile
IR- Emergency service floating bridge, field hospitals
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long term responses Chile

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LTR- President said 4 years to recover
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Nepal LIC earthquake
25th april 2015, 7.9 Richter scale, caused by collision of eurasian and Australian plate
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primary effects of Nepal
PE- 3 mil homeless
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secondary effects of Nepal
SE- Avalanche 250 missing
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immediate responses Nepal
IR- Social media search, field hospitals
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long term responses Nepal
LTR- Homeless rehoused, tourist site reopened
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Why would people live next to natural hazards?
Rarity of volcano explosion, poverty, fertile flood plain soils
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How to reduce risk from tectonic hazard
Monitoring- using scientific equipment to detect warning
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Example of Prediction
historical events
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Protection
building designs
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Planning
identifying and avoiding places at risk and planning evacuation routes
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Coriolis effect
The effect of Earth's rotation on the direction of winds and currents.
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Formation of a storm
26 degrees water, close to equator, warm ocean heats air causing it to rise, water evaporates from hot surface, so rising air contains water vapour, air starts to spin, eye is calm
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Where do storms form?
5-15 degrees north and south of equator because there is not enough spin from the rotation of the earth elsewhere
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What 3 features can climate change effect in a storm?
Distribution, frequency, intensity
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Typhoon Haiyan
November 2013, category 5, Philippines
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PE- Tacloban airport damage

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SE- Looting and violence

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IR- Red cross gave food

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LTR- Oxfam supported fishing boats for income, cash for cleaning city

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Somerset Levels Flood
Jan 2014 South West, caused by wettest Jan and low pressure driven across Atlantic ocean
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Social- 16 evacuated farms, no power

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Economic- £10m

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Environmental- Debris to be cleared

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IR- Villagers used boats to be evacuated

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LTR- £20m action plan to prevent flood by government

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Dam construction (preventing flood)
Water is held back in a dam and released in a controlled way, is expensive, makes hydroelectric power, agricultural land lost
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River engineering (preventing flood)
River may be widened or deepened to carry more water or straightened to flow faster, altering could lead to flood downstream
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Afforestation (preventing flooding)
Trees planted to increase interception of rain water
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Managed flooding (preventing flooding)
River floods naturally in places to prevent areas like settlements being flooded
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Evidence of climate change
Rising sea level of 10-20cm in 100 years, seasonal change eg flowering takes place at a different time, shrinking glaciers most will be gone by 2035
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Causes of climate change- natural
Changes in earths orbit, varied heat output from sun, volcanic activity ash blocks out sunlight
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Causes of climate change- human
Burning fossil fuels and realising co2 or deforestation
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Effects of climate change on people
Can bring weather hazards and take lives or property. eg rainfall brings mosquitoes and malaria
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Managing climate change
Carbon capture and storage technology to capture co2 from burning fossil fuels, using alternative energy resources, planting trees, international agreement
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Epping Forest
North East of London on Essex border, 4km wide, deciduous woodland, vegetation determined by climate
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Primary producer
Organisms that produce energy available for other organisms to eat eg plants and photosynthesis
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Consumers
Get energy by consuming other organisms
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Nutrient cycle
The movement and exchange of organic and inorganic matter back into the production of living matter
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How can change affect an eco system?
Natural- drought dries out lake
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Human- eutrophication

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Tropical rainforest distribution
Close to equator high temp heavy rainfall due to low equatorial pressure belt
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Desert distribution
30 degrees north and south of equator sub tropic high pressure belts sinking air stops cloud forming
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Polar distribution
Arctic/Antartic
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Deciduous and coniferous
50-60 degrees north of equator shed leaves in winter to retain moisture
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Temperate Grassland distribution
30 degrees north and south of equator warm dry summer grass can tolerate because used for grazing animals
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Mediterranean distribution
40-45 degrees north of equator hot summer due to pressure belts moving north and south throughout year
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Tropical grassland (savanna) distribution
15-30 north and south of equator low latitudes dry season hot fires thunderstorms in wet season
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Tundra distribution
From Arctic circle to 60-70 degrees north low growing plants adapted to cold
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Where is the Malaysian Rainforest?
South East Asia
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Example of Malaysian rainforest plant adaptation
Fan palms have large fan shaped leaves good for catching sunshine and water leaves are segmented to drain excess water
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Example of Malaysian rainforest animal adaptation
Sloths have longer arms than legs to grab branches grooved fur and inactive lifestyle helps growth of algae to camouflage
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Threats to the Malaysian rainforest
Commercial logging for palm oil, subsistence farming tribes burn trees to clear land, mineral extraction drilling for oil and gas, road building trees cut down
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Impacts of threats on Malaysian rainforest
Soil erodes and becomes loose and infertile, loss of biodiversity and medicine, contribution to climate change
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Economic gains of deforestation
Improved transport, hydroelectric power, minerals are valuable, palm oil industry benefits
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Economic losses of deforestation
Medicine loss
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Why manage rainforests?
Medicine, to keep biodiversity, water sources, tribes, reduce rate of global warming
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How to manage the Malaysian rainforest
Selective logging and afforestation, conservation and education (preserving rainforest), international agreements, Ecotourism, Forest Estates have been created by the government where no change of land use is allowed, Creation of National Parks to protect biodiversity
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Thar Desert
North West India most densely populated desert in the world
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How plants and animals adapt in the Thar desert
Snakes retain water with waterproof skin and most rodents are nocturnal. Cacti have waxy skin to reduce water loss and store water in roots and stems
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Challenges of the Thar desert
Temperature- working in high temperature hard for farmers and lead to water shortage
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Water supply- as a population and farming industry grows water need increases

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Accessibility issues- limited roads tarmac would melt

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Opportunity of the Thar Desert
Minerals like gypsum can be used for cement, tourism camels for money, energy development solar panels, farming crops like wheat
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Causes of desertification
Erosion, overgrazing, drought, soil compaction, agriculture
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Managing desertification
Afforestation binds soil together leaves and branches give shade to animals, decrease livestock, manage grazing
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How do waves form?
Waves form by wind blowing over the sea and the friction causes ripples
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Freeze thaw weathering
Water flows into cracks and freezes cracks then is weakened and is easier to be eroded
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Constructive waves
Deposit large amounts of sand and pebbles construct beaches strong swash (spilling)
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Destructive waves
Formed by storms can destroy beach removing pebbles with strong backwash (plunging)
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Mechanical weathering (cliffs)
The disintegration (break up of rocks) eg freeze thaw
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Chemical weathering (cliffs)
Caused by chemical changes eg rain water is acidic
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Biological weathering (cliffs)
Plants growing in cracks and animals burrowing in weak rock
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Rockfall (mass movement)
Fragments of rock break away from cliff face due to freeze thaw
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Landslide (mass movement)
Blocks of rock slide downhill
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Mud flow (mass movement)
Saturated soil and weak rock flows down slope
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Rotational slip (mass movement)
Slump of saturated soil and weak rock along a curved surface
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5 kinds of coastal erosion
Solution, corrosion, abrasion, attrition, hydraulic power
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Solution
Dissolving of rocks due to chemicals in water
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Corrosion
Fragments of rock picked up and hurled at cliff
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Abrasion
Sandpapering pebbles grinding against platform until smooth
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Attrition
Pebbles carried by sea knock against each other to be smaller and rounder
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Hydraulic power
Trapped air forced into holes cracks rock
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Coastal transportation 4 kinds
Solution; Suspension; Traction; Saltation
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Solution
Dissolved chemicals from limestone or chalk float in water
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Suspension
Particles suspended in water
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Saltation
Hopping or bouncing motion of particles too heavy to suspend
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Traction
Rolled pebbles