5.1.13
Extreme Weather
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Extreme Weather
Extreme weather is weather that is very different from the normal expected weather of a particular location. Extreme weather includes heat waves, droughts, freezing spells, flash floods, and strong winds.

What is extreme weather?
- Extreme weather is unexpected, unusual, unpredictable weather.
- It may be a very short lived event,
- E.g. a flash flood.
- Or can last over a longer period of time,
- E.g. a summer heatwave and drought.

Heat waves
- Heat waves are periods of abnormally high temperatures.
- E.g. the summer of 2018 in the UK and Europe.
- There were more than 1,000 excess deaths in the UK, wildfires, crop failures, and a widespread drought.
- E.g. the summer of 2018 in the UK and Europe.

Droughts
- Droughts are prolonged periods of abnormally low rainfall.
- They have to be more than 15 days but can last for years.
- They cause a shortage of water.

Drought example
- An example of a drought was the summer of 2018 in the UK and Europe when a lack of rainfall severely affected:
- Agriculture, tourism, sporting events, electricity production and water supply.
Extreme Weather
Extreme weather is weather that is very different from the normal expected weather of a particular location. Extreme weather includes heat waves, droughts, freezing spells, flash floods, and strong winds.

Extreme cold spells
- Extreme cold spells are periods of unusually low temperatures over widespread areas, possibly with heavy snowfall.
- E.g. The ‘Beast from the East’ in March 2018 in the UK where record low temperatures and heavy snowfall were recorded.
- Everyday life was severely disrupted and the economy suffered.

Flash floods
- Flash floods are excessive rainfall in a short period of time.
- E.g. Boscastle, Cornwall in August 2004 when approximately three times the average month’s rainfall fell in a single day.
- The resulting flood caused approximately £15 million of damage.

Strong winds
- Strong winds include storms and gales, cyclones, typhoons, tropical storms, tornadoes and hurricanes.
- Exceptionally high winds affect transport, electricity supplies and cause flooding and tremendous damage, including loss of life.

St Jude storm
- In the UK, the St Jude storm in 2013 brought torrential rain.
- The St Jude storm had winds up to 160 km/h.
- The St Jude storm caused five deaths.
- The St Jude storm left 600,000 homes without power.

Hurricane Katrina
- The extremely destructive Hurricane Katrina is the deadliest United States hurricane.
- Hurricane Katrina hit the south of the USA in 2005.
- At least 1,245 people died because of Hurricane Katrina.
- The damage to property was estimated at US$125 billion.
1Geography Skills
1.1Mapping
2Geology of the UK
2.1The UK's Rocks
2.2Case Study: The Peak District
3Geography of the World
4Development
4.1Development
4.2Uneven Development
4.3Case Study: Democratic Republic of Congo
5Weather & Climate
5.1Weather
5.2Climate
6The World of Work
7Natural Resources
7.1Rocks
8Rivers
8.1River Processes & Landforms
8.2Rivers & Flooding
9Coasts
9.1Formation of Coastal Landforms
10Glaciers
10.1Overview of Glaciers & How They Work
11Tectonics
11.1Continental Drift & Plate Tectonics
11.2Volcanoes
11.3Earthquakes
11.5Managing the Risk of Volcanoes & Earthquakes
12Climate Change
12.1The Causes & Consequences of Climate Change
13Global Population & Inequality
14Urbanisation
14.1Urbanisation
15Ecosystems
15.1The Major Biomes
15.2Case Study: The Amazon Rainforest
16Life in an Emerging Country
16.1Case Studies
17Analysis of Africa
17.1Africa
18Analysis of India
18.1India - Physical Geography
19Analysis of the Middle East
19.1The Middle East
20Analysis of Bangladesh
20.1Bangladesh Physical Geography
21Analysis of Russia
21.1Russia's Physical Geography
21.2Russia's Human Geography
Jump to other topics
1Geography Skills
1.1Mapping
2Geology of the UK
2.1The UK's Rocks
2.2Case Study: The Peak District
3Geography of the World
4Development
4.1Development
4.2Uneven Development
4.3Case Study: Democratic Republic of Congo
5Weather & Climate
5.1Weather
5.2Climate
6The World of Work
7Natural Resources
7.1Rocks
8Rivers
8.1River Processes & Landforms
8.2Rivers & Flooding
9Coasts
9.1Formation of Coastal Landforms
10Glaciers
10.1Overview of Glaciers & How They Work
11Tectonics
11.1Continental Drift & Plate Tectonics
11.2Volcanoes
11.3Earthquakes
11.5Managing the Risk of Volcanoes & Earthquakes
12Climate Change
12.1The Causes & Consequences of Climate Change
13Global Population & Inequality
14Urbanisation
14.1Urbanisation
15Ecosystems
15.1The Major Biomes
15.2Case Study: The Amazon Rainforest
16Life in an Emerging Country
16.1Case Studies
17Analysis of Africa
17.1Africa
18Analysis of India
18.1India - Physical Geography
19Analysis of the Middle East
19.1The Middle East
20Analysis of Bangladesh
20.1Bangladesh Physical Geography
21Analysis of Russia
21.1Russia's Physical Geography
21.2Russia's Human Geography
Practice questions on Extreme Weather
Can you answer these? Test yourself with free interactive practice on Seneca — used by over 10 million students.
- 1
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- 4Where experienced flash flooding in August 2004?Multiple choice
- 5What is a drought?Multiple choice
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