วันพุธที่ 2 พฤศจิกายน พ.ศ. 2554

FLOOD

     A flood is an overflow of an expanse of water that submerges land. The EU Floods directive defines a flood as a temporary covering by water of land not normally covered by water. In the sense of "flowing water", the word may also be applied to the inflow of the tide. Flooding may result from the volume of water within a body of water, such as a river or lake, which overflows or breaks levees, with the result that some of the water escapes its usual boundaries.
     While the size of a lake or other body of water will vary with seasonal changes in precipitation and snow melt, it is not a significant flood unless such escapes of water endanger land areas used by man like a village, city or other inhabited area.
     Floods can also occur in rivers, when flow exceeds the capacity of the river channel, particularly at bends or meanders. Floods often cause damage to homes and businesses if they are placed in natural flood plains of rivers. While flood damage can be virtually eliminated by moving away from rivers and other bodies of water, since time out of mind, people have lived and worked by the water to seek sustenance and capitalize on the gains of cheap and easy travel and commerce by being near water. That humans continue to inhabit areas threatened by flood damage is evidence that the perceived value of living near the water exceeds the cost of repeated periodic flooding.
     The word "flood" comes from the Old English flod, a word common to Germanic languages (compare German Flut, Dutch vloed from the same root as is seen in flow, float; also compare with Latin fluctus, flumen). Deluge myths are mythical stories of a great flood sent by a deity or deities to destroy civilization as an act of divine retribution, and are featured in the mythology of many cultures.

 

Control

 


Autumn Mediterranean flooding in Alicante (Spain), 1997.


The River Berounka, Czech Republic, burst its banks in the 2002 European floods and houses in the village of Hlásná Třebaň, Beroun District, were inundated.

A river bank denuded of grass and other vegetation. Piles of deadwood line the high-water mark.
Debris and bank erosion left after the 2009 Red River Flood in Winnipeg, Manitoba.

Pittsburgh floods in 1936.


Flooding near Snoqualmie, Washington, 2009.


Floods in Bangladesh 2009

     In many countries across the world, rivers prone to floods are often carefully managed. Defenses such as levees, bunds, reservoirs, and weirs are used to prevent rivers from bursting their banks. When these defenses fail, emergency measures such as sandbags or portable inflatable tubes are used. Coastal flooding has been addressed in Europe and the Americas with coastal defences, such as sea walls, beach nourishment, and barrier islands.

 

Europe

     Remembering the misery and destruction caused by the 1910 Great Flood of Paris, the French government built a series of reservoirs called Les Grands Lacs de Seine (or Great Lakes) which helps remove pressure from the Seine during floods, especially the regular winter flooding.London is protected from sea flooding by the Thames Barrier, a huge mechanical barrier across the River Thames, which is raised when the sea water level reaches a certain point.
Venice has a similar arrangement, although it is already unable to cope with very high tides; a new system of variable-height dikes is under construction. The defences of both London and Venice would be rendered inadequate if sea levels were to rise.
     The Adige in Northern Italy was provided with an underground canal that allows to drain part of its flow into the Garda Lake (in the Po drainage basin), thus lessening the risk of estuarine floods. The underground canal has been used twice, in 1966 and 2000.
     The largest and most elaborate flood defences can be found in the Netherlands, where they are referred to as Delta Works with the Oosterschelde dam as its crowning achievement. These works were built in response to the North Sea flood of 1953 of the southwestern part of the Netherlands. The Dutch had already built one of the world's largest dams in the north of the country: the Afsluitdijk (closing occurred in 1932).
Currently the Saint Petersburg Flood Prevention Facility Complex is to be finished by 2008, in Russia, to protect Saint Petersburg from storm surges. It also has a main traffic function, as it completes a ring road around Saint Petersburg. Eleven dams extend for 25.4 kilometres and stand eight metres above water level.
     In Austria, flooding for over 150 years, has been controlled by various actions of the Vienna Danube regulation, with dredging of the main Danube during 1870–75, and creation of the New Danube from 1972–1988.
     In Northern Ireland flood risk management is provided by Rivers Agency.

 

North America

     Another elaborate system of floodway defences can be found in the Canadian province of Manitoba. The Red River flows northward from the United States, passing through the city of Winnipeg (where it meets the Assiniboine River) and into Lake Winnipeg. As is the case with all north-flowing rivers in the temperate zone of the Northern Hemisphere, snowmelt in southern sections may cause river levels to rise before northern sections have had a chance to completely thaw. This can lead to devastating flooding, as occurred in Winnipeg during the spring of 1950. To protect the city from future floods, the Manitoba government undertook the construction of a massive system of diversions, dikes, and floodways (including the Red River Floodway and the Portage Diversion). The system kept Winnipeg safe during the 1997 flood that devastated many communities upriver from Winnipeg, including Grand Forks, North Dakota and Ste. Agathe, Manitoba. It also kept Winnipeg safe during the 2009 flood.
     In the U.S., the New Orleans Metropolitan Area, 35% of which sits below sea level, is protected by hundreds of miles of levees and flood gates. This system failed catastrophically, in numerous sections, during Hurricane Katrina, in the city proper and in eastern sections of the Metro Area, resulting in the inundation of approximately 50% of the metropolitan area, ranging from a few centimetres to 8.2 metres (a few inches to 27 feet) in coastal communities. In an act of successful flood prevention, the Federal Government of the United States offered to buy out flood-prone properties in the United States in order to prevent repeated disasters after the 1993 flood across the Midwest. Several communities accepted and the government, in partnership with the state, bought 25,000 properties which they converted into wetlands. These wetlands act as a sponge in storms and in 1995, when the floods returned, the government did not have to expend resources in those areas.

 

Asia

     In India, Bangladesh and China, flood diversion areas are rural areas that are deliberately flooded in emergencies in order to protect cities.
     Many have proposed that loss of vegetation (deforestation) will lead to a risk increase. With natural forest cover the flood duration should decrease. Reducing the rate of deforestation should improve the incidents and severity of floods.

 

Africa

     In Egypt, both the Aswan Dam (1902) and the Aswan High Dam (1976) have controlled various amounts of flooding along the Nile river.

Deadliest floods
     Below is a list of the deadliest floods worldwide, showing events with death tolls at or above 100,000 individuals.
Death toll Event
Location Date
2,500,000–3,700,000 1931 China floods
China 1931
900,000–2,000,000 1887 Yellow River (Huang He) flood
China 1887
500,000–700,000 1938 Yellow River (Huang He) flood
China 1938
231,000 Banqiao Dam failure, result of Typhoon Nina. Approximately 86,000 people died from flooding and another 145,000 died during subsequent disease.
China 1975
230,000 Indian Ocean tsunami
Indonesia 2004
145,000 1935 Yangtze river flood
China 1935
100,000+ St. Felix's Flood, storm surge
Netherlands 1530
100,000 Hanoi and Red River Delta flood
North Vietnam 1971
100,000 1911 Yangtze river flood
China 1911

วันอังคารที่ 1 พฤศจิกายน พ.ศ. 2554

Feu de forêt

     Un feu de forêt (FdF en jargon pompier) est un incendie qui se propage sur une étendue boisée. Il peut être d'origine naturelle (dû à la foudre ou à une éruption volcanique) ou humaine (intentionnel et criminel ou involontaire et accidentel à partir de feux agricoles ou allumés pour « l'entretien » de layons ou des zones ouvertes pour la chasse).
     Par souci écologique, quand le milieu, le contexte et la législation le permettent, on peut localement utiliser des « feux contrôlés » ;
1. pour brûler une zone à haut risque d'incendie avant qu'elle ne soit trop sèche,
2. pour entretenir certains habitats nécessaires à certaines espèces qui nécessitent des feux (quelques insectes et champignons vivent sur les bois brûlés)
3. pour restaurer la diversité écopaysagère de certains milieux devenus très homogènes afin d'y restaurer un habitat pour les espèces pionnières.

     La plupart des feux sont volontaires (déboisement à fin de mise en culture), criminels ou ont pour origine une imprudence (barbecue, mégot de cigarette, feu d'écobuage).
Les feux de forêts sont à l'origine d'une pollution de l'air, de l'eau et des sols.








Feu de forêt dans le Montana




 

Historique

     
     En France, le premier texte interdisant à toute personne d’allumer du feu en forêt remonte à 1669. C’est en 1769 qu’une ordonnance enjoignait aux propriétaires de forêts d’enlever les bois et broussailles sur une largeur de 18 mètres de part et d’autre des grandes routes. Comme le soulignaient André et Nicole Cabau, en 1988 dans leur livre Tourtour, Chronique d’un village du Haut Var, « heureux temps où les coupe-feux étaient légalement obligatoires… ».

 

Moyennes annuelles

     On estime que la surface brûlée chaque annéeestenviron (NB : 1 km² = 100 h a ) :
- Israël : 35 km², soit 0,17% du territoire
- États-Unis : 17 400 km², soit 0,18% du territoire - France : 300 km², soit 0,05 % du territoire et 0,16 % de la forêt
-
Grèce : 271 km², soit 0,20% du territoire total.
-
Espagne : 1 570 km², soit 0,31% du territoire
-
Portugal : 426 km², soit 0,4 6% du territoire (étude menée sur la période 1956-1996 par la FAO)
-
Italie : 940 km², soit 0,31% du territoire, avec 8300 feux par an en moyenne (étude menée sur
la période 19621996 par la FAO)
- Maroc : 30 km², d'après les statistiques du service des incendies de forêts
- Canada : la zone forestière au Canada est importante dans toutes les provinces sauf le sud des provinces des Prairies canadiennes ainsi qu'à l'Île-du-Prince-Édouard (IPE), purement agricoles. Les forêts au sud du 55e parallèle sont en général commercialisables et le service de lutte aux incendies y est développé. Plus au nord, les feux de forêt ne sont pas contrôlés à moins de menace pour les localités. Ainsi le nombre et la superficie touchés par les feux de forêts semblent énormes au Yukon (YK) et aux Territoires du Nord-Ouest (TNO) mais ce n'est que de la forêt de taïga ou de toundra en général non exploitée. Les surfaces incendiées montrées sur le graphique sont absolues et non proportionnelles à la superficie de chaque province.
-
Québec (QC dans le graphique) : en moyenne plus de 800 incendies selon la SOPFEU. La moyenne variant grandement entre les années sèches et celles humides.
- Autres provinces et territoires sur la carte et non mentionnés ci-dessus :

- CB:
Colombie-Britannique, AB: Alberta, SK: Saskatchewan, MB: Manitoba, ON: Ontario, NB: Nouveau-Brunswick, NE: Nouvelle-Écosse, TN: Terre-Neuve-et-Labrador, PC: Parcs Canada.