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Floods

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River Flood: Some floods occur seasonally when winter or spring rains, coupled ... In addition, intense rainfall over a relatively small area may lead to a flood. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Floods


1
Floods
  • School Abdallah Al-Alayly
  • Teacher Ms. Abeer Abdallah
  • Prepared by Grade 9 students

2
What Is A Flood?
  • Floods are the most common and widespread of all
    natural disasters except fire. A flood as defined
    by the National Flood Insurance Program is a
    general and temporary condition of partial or
    complete inundation of two or more acres of
    normally dry land area or of two or more
    properties from overflow of inland or tidal
    waters, unusual and rapid accumulation or runoff
    of surface waters from any source or a mudflow.

3
Kinds of Floods
  • River Flood Some floods occur seasonally when
    winter or spring rains, coupled with melting
    snows, fill river basins with too much water too
    quickly. Torrential rains from decaying
    hurricanes or tropical systems can also produce
    river flooding.
  • Coastal Flood Winds generated from tropical
    storms and hurricanes or intense offshore low
    pressure systems can drive ocean water inland and
    cause significant flooding. Coastal flooding can
    also be produced by sea waves called tsunamis.
  • Urban Flood As land is converted from fields or
    woodlands to roads and parking lots, it loses its
    ability to absorb rainfall. During periods of
    urban flooding, streets can become swift moving
    rivers, while basements can become death traps as
    they fill with water.
  • Flash Flood Dams are designed to hold a rivers
    water in reserve for when people may need it. If
    a dam were to break then all the trapped water
    would rush down the river at the same time and
    cause a flash flood.
  • Ice Jam Floating ice can accumulate at a natural
    or manmade obstruction and stop the flow of water.

4
Causes of Floods
  • Numerous factors contribute in causing floods.
    When it rains or snows, some of the water is
    retained by the soil, some is absorbed by
    vegetation, some evaporates and the remainder,
    which reaches stream channels, is called runoff.
    Floods occur when soil and vegetation cannot
    absorb all the water water then runs off the
    land in quantities that cannot be carried in
    stream channels or retained in natural ponds and
    constructed reservoirs. About 30 percent of all
    precipitation is runoff and this amount may be
    increased by melting snow masses. Moreover, heavy
    rain combined with melting snow causes the rivers
    to overflow their banks and flood. In addition,
    intense rainfall over a relatively small area may
    lead to a flood. Furthermore, high tides induced
    by severe winds over ocean surfaces result in
    floods. Thus, floods occur due to prolonged
    rainfall lasting several days, intense rainfall
    over a short period of time, an ice or debris jam
    that causes a river or stream to overflow and
    flood the surrounding area, snow-melt combined
    with rain in winter, severe thunderstorms, or
    tropical cyclones that bring intense rainfall to
    the coastal and inland areas in the summer and
    fall.

5
Effects of Floods
  • There are two kinds of flood effects Domestic
    and national
  • Domestic effects are the erosion of people which
    continues in several places of the effected
    place, city drainage systems that fail to serve
    their purpose and the drains that carry the
    polluted waste water which should have actually
    gone to a sewerage system for treatment.
  • National effects are the soil erosion which is
    one of the main effects of heavy floods the flow
    of rivers above the danger level insufficient
    stock of food and medicine to cope with the
    situation the fact that the affective places
    remain cut off with the rest of the country the
    damage occurred to several hutments, granaries,
    fisheries and standing crops the submersion of
    many roads and relief camps by flood water
    catastrophic debris slides can be triggered by
    flood producing rain and a great heap of
    destruction for floods can roll boulders, tear
    out trees, destroy buildings and bridges and
    scour out new channels.

6
What To Do?
  • There are some steps that should be taken before
    or during a flood.
  • one should head for higher ground and stay away
    from flood water .
  • If one lives in a flood-prone area or think he is
    at risk, he should evacuate immediately. It is
    important to move to a safe area before access is
    cut off by floodwaters. The most dangerous thing
    one can do is to try walking, swimming or driving
    through flood waters.
  • one should follow the instructions and advice of
    local authorities.
  • If one is driving, he should avoid already
    flooded areas.
  • If ones vehicle becomes surrounded by water or
    the engine stalls, and if he can safely get out,
    he should abandon his vehicle immediately and
    climb to higher ground.

7
Places Hit By Floods
  • BangladeshAn exceptionally heavy flood affected
    3.5 million people in half of the country's 64
    districts.
  • India the east and north-east of India
    witnessed floods which killed at least 43 people
    in landslides yesterday.
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