Rivers

Opportunities presented by a river

iGCSE Geography revision notes,Rivers
2.2 Rivers
Candidates should be able to:Explain the main hydrological characteristics and processes which operate in rivers and drainage basins Demonstrate an understanding of the work of a river in eroding, transporting and depositing Describe and explain the formation of the landforms associated with these processes Demonstrate an understanding that rivers present hazards and offer opportunities for people Explain what can be done to manage the impacts of river floodingFurther GuidanceCharacteristics of rivers (including width, depth, speed of flow, discharge) and drainage basins (including watershed, tributary, confluence) Processes which operate in a drainage basin (including interception, infiltration, throughflow, groundwater flow, evaporation, overland flow) Forms of river valleys-long profile and shape in cross-section, waterfalls, potholes, meanders, oxbow lakes, deltas, levées and flood plains Causes of hazards (including flooding and river erosion) Opportunities of living on a flood plain or a delta or near a river
Case Study required for 2.2The opportunities presented by a river or rivers, the associated hazards and their management

What opportunities do rivers present?

  • Irrigation for agriculture
  • Transportation
  • Drinking water
  • Can have a potential for hydroelectric power from dams
  • Flat land in the flood plain for living and making roads/railways etc…
  • Making a living as a fisherman or a supervisor for river activities like canoeing, kayaking, canyoning, white water rafting… 

Characteristics of rivers in the upper course:

Gradients are steep and the river channels are narrow. The main erosion present in the upper course of the river is vertical erosion and features of this are steep valley sides, gorges and waterfalls.

iGCSE Geography revision notes,Rivers

Transportation

Type of TransportationWhat is it?
SolutionMinerals are dissolved in the water and carried along in solution. This typically occurs in areas where the underlying bedrock is limestone or chalk.
SuspensionFine, light material such as alluvium is carried along in the water. This is known as suspended load. The load bounces in line with the rise and fall in the velocity of the river.
SaltationSmall pebbles and stones are bounced along the river bed.
TractionLarge boulders and rocks are rolled along the river bed. The load carried this way is called bed load.

Erosion

Type of ErosionWhat is it?
AbrasionWhen boulders or stones wear away the river banks and beds. It is responsible for vertical erosion and lateral erosion.
AttritionWhen sediment particles knock against the bed or each other and break, becoming more rounded and smaller as you move down the river.
Hydraulic actionWhen water is pushed into river banks and forced into small cracks in the bedrock and this keeps on happening which makes the crack bigger.
SolutionWhen the acidic water dissolves rock such as chalk or limestone.
iGCSE Geography revision notes,Rivers

Case Study: Opportunities Provided by Rivers in Tokyo

「tokyo rivers map」の画像検索結果

The Tamagawa river runs from the west to the east into Tokyo bay.

The Sumida river runs from the north to the south into the Tokyo bay.

Direct Opportunities:

Water for irrigation /farming (e.g. rice on Kanto plain)

Water used in industry 

Water used for domestic (household use) e.g. Tokyo

Leisure and tourism – especially in Tokyo

Indirect Opportunities:

Provides flat floodplain for building 

Fertile floodplain for farming

Flat straight transport route for roads and railways

Hydrological cycle

iGCSE Geography revision notes,Rivers

Key terms: (Erosion)

Hydraulic action – force and impact of water removing material from bed and banks of a river

Solution – rocks dissolved in the presence of water (e.g. limestone) 

Attrition – when material wears away the bed and banks 

Abrasion – effect of load grinding away bed and banks of river like a sandpaper

Key terms: (Transport)

Suspension – very light materials carried near the surface 

Solution – minerals dissolved and carried in solution 

Saltation – small pebbles and stones bounced along the riverbed 

Traction – heavy boulders and rocks rolled along the riverbed

Lower course features (1)

Oxbow lakes:

iGCSE Geography revision notes,Rivers

Meanders:

iGCSE Geography revision notes,Rivers

Lower course features (2)

Deltas:

iGCSE Geography revision notes,Rivers

Flood plains:

iGCSE Geography revision notes,Rivers

Hazards & management

Hazards:

  • Flooding leading to loss of housing 
  • Loss and diversion of transport routes 
  • Loss of social, environmental and economic amenities (facilities)
  • Stress, injury and death

Management:

  • Store of sandbags for emergency use 
  • A system of sirens and warnings and evacuation procedures 
  • Temporary, moveable metal barriers that can be put up quickly

Case study: (2019 Tamagawa flood)

How is Tokyo protected from flooding?Hard Engineering (try and give specific located examples)Soft Engineering (try and give specific located examples)
1Underground tunnels in Saitama linked to several major rivers. (Build underground as areas above ground are all used for housing etc.) The tunnels fill up during times of flood preventing less water joining the Arakawa and then pump water back into the Edo river after the flood levels have dropped.Flood plains around Tama river allow for some flooding
2Large embankments by flood plainsAfforestation in the upper reaches of the river e.g. Ara river in Saitama
3Rivers lined with concrete to manage the flowFlood water storage spaces are incorporated into building designs
4An ‘extra’ river was built onto the Arakawa to divert rivers away from central Tokyo.
5Permeable’ pavements in Tokyo.
Evaluation of flood protection in TokyoBenefits((give specific detail where possible)Problems (give specific detail where possible)
1Flood tunnels very effective (risk of flooding reduced since completion)Very expensive and doesn’t protect everywhere.
2Increase in typhoons from global warming so ‘strong’ measures needed and the flood tunnels have worked.Too much hard engineering – not sustainable.
3Flood plains create recreational spaces.Problem of flooding still exists – has Tokyo done enough?
4People can cycle along embankments and there are often areas for doing HanamiConcrete lining of rivers increases the chance of flooding downstream.
5Hard engineering disturbs natural habitats/wildlife

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