Natural Hazards Simplified Revision Notes for GCSE AQA Geography
Revision notes with simplified explanations to understand Natural Hazards quickly and effectively.
Learn about Natural Hazards for your GCSE Geography Exam. This Revision Note includes a summary of Natural Hazards for easy recall in your Geography exam
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1.1.1 Natural Hazards
What is a Natural Hazard?
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An event becomes a hazard when it affects people.
A natural hazard is a natural process which could cause death, injury, or disruption to humans, or destroy property and possessions.
A natural disaster is an event that has actually happened.
What are the Main Types of Hazards?
Geological Hazards:
Caused by land and tectonic processes.
Examples: volcanoes, earthquakes, landslides.
Meteorological Hazards:
Caused by weather and climate.
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Examples: tropical storms, flooding due to extreme weather.
What Affects a Country's Ability to Cope?
Vulnerability:
The more people in areas exposed to natural hazards, the greater the probability they will be affected.
Example: People living at the base of a volcano in Naples, Italy are vulnerable to eruptions.
Capacity to Cope:
3. Natural hazards have to affect human activities to count as a hazard. The better a population can cope with an extreme event, the lower the threat.
4. Example: High-Income Countries (HICs) are better able to cope with earthquakes as they can build earthquake-proof buildings and repair damage afterwards.
Hazard Risk
Techtonic Hazards
The probability that a natural hazard occurs.
Three main factors affecting risk:
5. Type: The hazard risk from some hazards is greater than others (e.g., tropical storms can be predicted but earthquakes can't).
6. Frequency: Some natural disasters occur more often than others (e.g., flooding).
7. Magnitude: More severe natural hazards cause greater effects than less severe events (e.g., a magnitude 5 earthquake compared to a magnitude 8).
Tectonic Plates
Structure:
The inner core is solid and outer liquid.
Around the core is the mantle - semi-molten rock moving slowly.
The outer layer is the crust, divided into slabs called tectonic plates.
Types of Plates:
Plates can be continental or oceanic.
The meeting point is called a plate boundary/margin.
Movement:
Plates move due to convection currents in the mantle.
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