Flood defenses, planning, and management
In western countries, rivers prone to flooding are often carefully managed. Defences such as levees, bunds, reservoirs, and weirs are used to prevent rivers from bursting their banks. Coastal flooding has been addressed in Europe with coastal defenses, such as sea walls and beach nourishment. London, England is protected from flooding by a huge mechnical
barrier across the River Thames, which is raised when the water level reaches a certain point (see Thames Barrier). Venice, Italy has a similar arrangement, although it is already unable to cope with very high tides, and will become increasingly inadequate if anticipated rises in sea level occur. The biggest and most elaborate flood defences can be found in the Netherlands, where they are referred to as Delta Works with the Oosterscheldedam as its crowning achievement.
In some flood-prone areas with high population density, such as Holland and parts of England, planning laws have been used to prevent building on flood plains. In some cases, pressure from developers has caused these controls to be eroded, with an increasing number of new developments reliant
on artificial defences for protection from floodwaters.
Bangladesh has not experienced catastrophic coastal flooding since 1995, but the country relies heavily on foreign support and technology to combat flooding. The United States has donated hurricane shelters to the country, and India provides the Bangladesh government with weather forecasting to give the country time to plan its response to hurricanes.
Significant prehistorical floods
In prehistoric times, several great floods are known or suspected to have occurred with varying amounts of supporting evidence. These include:
- The flooding of the Mediterranean Sea about 5 million years ago. It had previously become a desert after continental movement had closed the Strait of Gibraltar (variously placed at 8 million or 5.5 million years ago).
- The flooding of the Black Sea, caused by rising level of the Mediterranean as the last ice age ended (circa 5600 BC).
- As the ice age ended in North America, there was a great flood caused by the breaking of the ice dams holding Lake Agassiz.
- The Missoula Floods of Washington, also caused by breaking ice dams.
See Deluge (prehistoric) for a more complete and detailed listing.
Significant modern floods
See also
Drought, Hydrography, Trasvasement, Meteorology
, Flash flood
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