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| Floods 2004 |
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Home | News | Weather & Flood | Disaster Management | Reports | Data | Maps/Imagery | Previous Floods |
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The people are repeatedly confronted by natural and human-made
catastrophes such as flooding, surface and groundwater pollution,
droughts, cyclones, riverbank erosion, air pollution, wetland loss,
tornadoes, earthquakes, and coastal erosion. While some of these
environmental degradations and calamities are not directly related to
human activities and land-use practices (such as earthquakes, tornadoes,
and cyclones), others are
Riverine floods occur when the amount of runoff originating in a watershed (the area that collects and directs the surface runoff into the rivers, streams and lakes that drain it) exceeds the carrying capacity of natural and constructed drainage system. Flooding can occur due to river overflow or surface runoff. There are two types of floods which occur in Bangladesh: annual floods (barsha) that inundate up to 20% of the land area; and low frequency floods of high magnitude that inundate more than 35% of the area (bonna). While the annual floods are essential and desirable for overall growth of the Bangladesh delta and the economy, the major floods such as those that occurred in 1954, 1955, 1974, 1984, 1987, 1988, 1993, 1998, 1999, and 2000 are destructive and cause serious threat to lives and economy. We need to analyze possible underlying causes of recent unusual and frequent floods in Bangladesh in light of hydrodynamic processes that operate in the watershed and the land use practices that take place in this region. |
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