The Hydrological Cycle1 Current
The Hydrological Cycle1 Current
The Hydrological Cycle1 Current
Sources of Water
Hydrological Cycle
• A major part of the hydrological system, drainage basins drain all the water
which lands on the Earth's surface
• A drainage basin is an open system
• Every drainage basin is unique and is different in shape and size, with
different rock types, relief and land use.
Channel network
[1]
• Answer:
o The changing of water to water vapour by plants/evaporation of water
by plants/trees/vegetation [1]
[3]
• Answer:
o X = Overland flow/surface run off [1]
o Y = Through flow [1]
o Z = Ground(water) flow [1]
River Processes
• Erosion is the wearing down of surfaces
• There are four erosion processes which change the shape of the river
channel:
o Hydraulic action - The force of water removes material from the bed
and banks of the river.
o Abrasion – When the materials carried by a river scrape away the
banks and the bed.
o Attrition - When the materials carried by the river hit each other and
the pieces become rounder and smaller.
o Corrosion (solution) - When rocks are dissolved by slightly acid
water.
Types of Erosion
Deposition
• When a river does not have enough energy to carry materials it drops them.
This is deposition
• The causes of reduced energy include:
o Reduced discharge due to a lack of precipitation
or abstraction upstream
o Decreased gradient
o Slower flow on the inside of a river bend or where the river is shallower
o When the river enters a sea/ocean or lake
• The heaviest material is deposited first, this is known as the bedload
• The lighter materials, gravel, sand and silt are known as alluvium and they
are carried further downstream
• The dissolved materials are carried out to sea
[5]
• Answer:
o Hydraulic action [1] Power of water wears away bed and banks
releasing air compressed in
cracks [1]
Abrasion [1] Material carried by river grinds bed and banks/sandpaper
action [1]
Corrosion / solution [1] Rocks dissolved by chemical reactions [1]
Attrition [1] Load reduced in size as particles hit each other when
being carried by
water [1]
Vertical erosion [1]
• Remember you will receive 1 mark for the type of erosion and the second
mark for explaining how the erosion process works.
River characteristics
• All rivers have a long and cross profiles
• Each river's long and cross profiles are unique but they do have some
characteristics in common
• These profiles show changes in river characteristics from the source to the
mouth
Long profile
• The long profile of a river shows the changes in the river gradient from the
source to the mouth
• Most long profiles have a concave shape with similar characteristics:
o The source is usually in an upland area
o The upper course of the river includes areas which are steep with
uneven surfaces
o In the middle course the gradient decreases
o In the lower section the gradient decreases further until it becomes
almost flat
Long Profile
Cross profiles
• The cross profiles of a river are cross-sections from one bank to another
• Cross profiles of the upper, middle and lower courses show the changes in
the river channel
• Upper course characteristics include:
o Shallow
o Steep valley sides
o Narrow
o Low velocity
o Large bedload
o Rough channel bed
o High levels of friction
o Vertical erosion
• Waterfalls form where there is a drop in the river bed from one level to
another
• This drop is often due to changes in the hardness of the rock, where hard rock
overlies soft rock
• Hydraulic action and abrasion are the main erosional processes:
•
o The soft rock erodes quicker, undercutting the hard rock and creating
a plunge pool
o This leads to the development of an overhang of hard rock which
eventually over time, collapses
o The overhang falls into the plunge pool increasing abrasion and
making the plunge pool deeper
o The process then begins again and the waterfall retreats upstream
leaving a steep sided gorge
Waterfall Formation
V-shaped valleys
Interlocking spurs
Lowland features:
•
o Meanders
o Ox-bow lakes
o Floodplains
o Levees
Meanders
Oxbow lakes
Opportunities
• Study Fig 1.1, 1.2 and 1.3, which are photographs of three different
rivers
FIG1 .1
FIG 1.2
Fig 1.3
Using evidence from Figs 1.1, 1.2 and 1.3 only, describe three different
benefits of living near a river.
[3]
• Answer:
o Agriculture/grazing/farmland/fertile soils/growing
crops/cultivation/keeping animals [1]
o Fishing/fish market/fish farming [1]
o Transportation/moving cargo/imports/exports [1]
o Tourism [1]
o Industry [1]
o Flat land for building [1]
River Management
Managing the Impacts of River Flooding
Flood prediction
• The key factor in assessing the flood risk is time taken for the precipitation to
reach the river from where it falls - the lag time
• Rivers with a short lag time and steep rising limb have a much greater risk of
flooding
o The water reaches the river rapidly and the river may not have the
capacity to cope with the influx of water
• Rivers with a long lag time and gentle rising limb have a lower flood risk
o The water reaches the river more slowly causing a gradual increase in
discharge
• The lag time depends on some human and physical factors
• These lead to increased overland flow which shortens the lag time
Rock Type Impermeable rocks reduce percolation and increase overland flow
..................................................... hours
[1]
• Answer:
o Between 26-28 hours
Flood management
• The key cause of flooding is the amount and duration of precipitation this
cannot be altered
• There are a number of methods of managing floods and reducing the severity
and/or impact
• The two main categories of flood management are hard and soft
engineering:
o Hard engineering involves building structures or changing the river
channel
o Soft engineering works with natural processes of the river and
surrounding environment
• Soft engineering is increasingly popular
• Soft engineering is an example of mitigation where schemes aim to minimise
damage rather than trying to prevent the flooding
• Other methods that can be used to decrease the risk of flooding are:
o Leaving the stubble on the fields after the crop is harvested helps to stabilise
the soil and increase infiltration
o Contour ploughing which involves ploughing fields across the slope rather
than up and down. This gives the water more time to infiltrate and stops the
ploughed furrows becoming channels for water
o Improved forecasting and flood warnings
o Dredging the rivers to increase capacity, however this often leads to the need
for concrete reinforcement of the banks
Opportunities
• Water supply
o There are many cities including New Delhi and Kolkata along the
Ganges/Brahmaputra drainage basins which take their water supplies
from the river
• Agriculture and fishing
o The regular flooding in the drainage basin leaves deposits of alluvium
which are rich in nutrients and ideal for growing crops such as rice and
jute
o The rivers provide water for irrigation and for the flooding of rice fields
o Fish from the river provide food and jobs for local people
• Culture
o The Ganges is sacred to Hindus and is worshipped as the goddess
Ganga
• Tourism
o Three sites which are holy to Hindus lie on the banks of the Ganges
(Haridwar, Allahabad and Varansi) this leads millions of pilgrims to visit
each year
o Rafting and river cruises are also increasingly popular
• Flat land
o The flat floodplains mean that construction is easy, and the floodplains
have one of the highest density populations in the world
• Energy
o There are a number of dams along both rivers including the Tehri Dam
on the Ganges, which is the biggest hydroelectric power plant in India
Hazards
• The Ganges/Brahmaputra drainage basin regularly experiences floods
including most recently in May 2022
o In 1998 75% of Bangladesh was flooded over 30 million people were
made homeless
o Over 1000 people died
o 700,000 hectares of crops were destroyed
• 'Normal' floods are vital to provide fertile soil and irrigation, but increasingly
flooding is becoming more unpredictable and extensive
• The causes of flooding are both human and natural - see the table below
Human Natural
Deforestation particularly in the upland Low-lying land- the land in the Ganges delta
areas leads to less interception and in Bangladesh is at or just above sea level
infiltration increasing overland flow meaning that it floods more easily
Human induced climate change has led to
increased melting of Himalayan snow and ice Climate - Bangladesh has a monsoon
which increases discharge. It may also have climate which means that there are heavy
affected climate patterns leading to increased and prolonged rains for a number of months
frequency and severity of tropical cyclones
Urbanisation as the population increases
and there is more rural-urban migration this Tropical cyclones - these bring heavy
leads to increased overland flow due to rainfall
impermeable surfaces
Agriculture increases overland flow and soil Melting snow and ice from the Himalayas in
erosion which reduces the capacity of the spring leads to a rapid increase in river
rivers discharge
Management
• Bangladesh is an LEDC
o The country lacks the money for large schemes to reduce the impact of
flooding
• Flood Action Plan (FAP)was funded by the World Bank and a number of
MEDCs, measures that were proposed include:
o Monitoring of flood levels
o Construction of levées/embankments
o Building 5000 flood shelters
o Creating flood water storage systems
o A more effective flood warning system
o Building of dams to store water
o Reducing deforestation
• The FAP was not considered a success because;
o Many parts of the project were never completed including the dams
and floodwater storage areas due to inadequate funding and corruption
o There was later a recognition that some flooding was necessary to
maintain agriculture in many areas
o 8 million people were forced to move to accommodate the FAP
constructions
o Changing the channel upstream meant that areas downstream suffered
more
o The government cannot afford the maintenance costs
• New management suggestions include;
o Better flood forecasting and warning systems
o More well stocked flood shelters
• These are less damaging to the environment and cheaper to maintain than
hard engineering such as embankments, dams and floodwater storage areas