Geography HL
Geography HL
13
Chapters
193
Notes
Option A - Freshwater – Drainage basins
Option A - Freshwater – Drainage basins
Option B - Oceans & Coastal Margins
Option B - Oceans & Coastal Margins
Option C - Extreme Environments
Option C - Extreme Environments
Option D - Geophysical Hazards
Option D - Geophysical Hazards
Option E - Leisure, Tourism & Sport
Option E - Leisure, Tourism & Sport
Option F - The Geography Of Food & Health
Option F - The Geography Of Food & Health
Option G - Urban Environments
Option G - Urban Environments
Unit 1 - Changing Population
Unit 1 - Changing Population
UNIT 2 - Global Climate - Vulnerability & Resilience
UNIT 2 - Global Climate - Vulnerability & Resilience
Unit 3 - Global Resource Consumption & Security
Unit 3 - Global Resource Consumption & Security
Unit 4 - Power, Places & Networks
Unit 4 - Power, Places & Networks
Unit 5 - Human Development & Diversity
Unit 5 - Human Development & Diversity
Unit 6 - Global Risks & Resilience
Unit 6 - Global Risks & Resilience
IB Resources
Option A - Freshwater – Drainage basins
Geography HL
Geography HL

Option A - Freshwater – Drainage basins

Understanding The Impact Of Urbanization On Flood Risks

Word Count Emoji
658 words
Reading Time Emoji
4 mins read
Updated at Emoji
Last edited on 5th Nov 2024

Table of content

Flood basics

  • Flood: When a river cannot contain all the water it is transporting in its channel, the water flows onto a flood plain.
  • Small floods: Typically contained on the flood plain close to the river.
  • Large floods: Cover a larger part of the flood plain and occur less often.

Recurrence interval

The recurrence interval is the frequency with which events of a certain size occur. High-magnitude, low-frequency events might occur once every 50 years, whereas low-magnitude, high-frequency events may occur yearly.

Relationship between flood magnitude, frequency, & economic loss

  • Most flows are contained within normal operating levels.
  • Disasters are caused by extremes of floods (or drought) and catastrophes are caused under very extreme conditions.
  • A catastrophe has a higher magnitude but a lower frequency than a disaster.

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IB Resources
Option A - Freshwater – Drainage basins
Geography HL
Geography HL

Option A - Freshwater – Drainage basins

Understanding The Impact Of Urbanization On Flood Risks

Word Count Emoji
658 words
Reading Time Emoji
4 mins read
Updated at Emoji
Last edited on 5th Nov 2024

Table of content

Flood basics

  • Flood: When a river cannot contain all the water it is transporting in its channel, the water flows onto a flood plain.
  • Small floods: Typically contained on the flood plain close to the river.
  • Large floods: Cover a larger part of the flood plain and occur less often.

Recurrence interval

The recurrence interval is the frequency with which events of a certain size occur. High-magnitude, low-frequency events might occur once every 50 years, whereas low-magnitude, high-frequency events may occur yearly.

Relationship between flood magnitude, frequency, & economic loss

  • Most flows are contained within normal operating levels.
  • Disasters are caused by extremes of floods (or drought) and catastrophes are caused under very extreme conditions.
  • A catastrophe has a higher magnitude but a lower frequency than a disaster.

Unlock the Full Content! File Is Locked Emoji

Dive deeper and gain exclusive access to premium files of Geography HL. Subscribe now and get closer to that 45 🌟