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Natural Hazards: Definition, Types and Risk

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·GCSE Geography·AQA 8035·8 min
3.1.1.1 Natural hazards

What Makes an Event a Natural Hazard?

A volcanic eruption in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, far from any population, is a natural event. The same eruption on the slopes of a densely populated city becomes a natural hazard.

A natural hazard is a natural event or process that has the potential to cause loss of life, injury, or disruption to human activity.

The critical word is potential. A hazard exists at the intersection of a natural event and human vulnerability. A river flooding an uninhabited plain every year is an ecological process; the same flood in a city of three million people is a disaster. The human dimension is what defines a hazard.

This distinction appears directly in AQA mark schemes. A question asking "what is a natural hazard?" expects the human impact dimension — answers that say only "a dangerous natural event" miss the defining element and are unlikely to gain the definition mark.

Types of Natural Hazard

Natural hazards are commonly grouped into categories such as tectonic, atmospheric and geomorphological hazards. In AQA's Natural Hazards section, these ideas are mainly applied through tectonic hazards, weather hazards and climate change.

TypeCauseExamples
TectonicMovement of Earth's tectonic platesEarthquakes, volcanic eruptions, tsunamis
AtmosphericWeather systems and atmospheric circulationTropical storms (hurricanes, typhoons), droughts, blizzards
GeomorphologicalSurface processes, slopes and riversFlooding, avalanches, landslides

Note that tsunamis are triggered by submarine earthquakes and are therefore tectonic in origin — not atmospheric. This is a frequent misclassification.

Floods sit in an interesting position: prolonged rainfall (atmospheric) is usually the trigger, but the outcome (a river overtops its banks) is a geomorphological process. AQA expects you to recognise the interaction; classifying floods as purely atmospheric is a simplification that can cost marks if a question asks you to explain cause.

Natural Factors Affecting Hazard Risk

Not every earthquake or storm causes equal damage. Several characteristics of the natural event itself determine how dangerous it is:

Magnitude — the energy or size of the event. A magnitude 8 earthquake releases roughly 1,000 times more energy than a magnitude 6. Higher magnitude generally means greater ground shaking, larger storm surge, or more lava.

Frequency — how often a hazard occurs. A coastline struck by a major storm every decade gives communities time to recover between events; one struck annually does not.

Duration — how long the hazard lasts. A six-month drought causes cumulative damage to agriculture, water supply and health that a single severe flood, however intense, may not.

Spatial predictability — whether we know in advance where the hazard is likely to strike. Earthquakes can be anticipated on fault zones; droughts are harder to predict spatially.

Areal extent — the geographical area the hazard covers. A major tropical storm can devastate thousands of square kilometres across several countries simultaneously; a landslide affects a single hillside.

Human Factors Affecting Hazard Risk

The same natural event produces very different outcomes depending on who experiences it. Human factors frequently matter more than the magnitude of the event itself.

Level of development — wealthier countries afford earthquake-resistant buildings, storm drainage systems, early warning networks and well-funded emergency services. Infrastructure absorbs and responds to the event.

Population density — the more people and structures concentrated in an affected area, the greater the potential loss of life and economic damage. A major earthquake centred under a sparsely populated desert kills few people; the same earthquake under a megacity is catastrophic.

Education and awareness — communities that recognise tsunami warning signs (rapidly receding sea), know earthquake drill procedures, or have been taught which routes to use during evacuation suffer lower death tolls. This is why community-based disaster risk reduction programmes are now central to international hazard management.

Quality of governance — effective governments enforce building codes, maintain hazard monitoring infrastructure, and coordinate responses. Corruption and weak enforcement allow substandard construction that collapses during moderate events.

Access to technology — seismometers, weather satellites, and flood early-warning systems allow prediction and warning before impact. Countries without this infrastructure cannot give residents time to act.

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Why People Live in Hazardous Areas

If natural hazards kill and destroy, why do hundreds of millions of people choose — or have no choice but — to live in hazard zones?

Economic benefit: Volcanic soils are among the most fertile on Earth, enriched by minerals from ash deposits. The slopes of Vesuvius (Italy) have supported intensive agriculture for two thousand years. Geothermal energy from volcanic regions (Iceland) provides cheap, reliable power. In flood-prone river deltas (Bangladesh, Nile Delta), annual flooding deposits silt that renews farmland.

Cultural and historic attachment: Families and communities have lived in a place for generations. Displacement carries enormous social cost — loss of community, livelihoods, and identity. A hazardous home is still home.

No viable alternative: For many people in LICs, there is nowhere else affordable to go. Leaving a flood-prone informal settlement often means losing access to the only employment within reach.

Risk perception: People systematically underestimate the probability of infrequent events. "The last major earthquake here was a century ago" becomes a psychological reason to stay rather than a warning. This optimism bias is well-documented in disaster research.

The Same Magnitude, Very Different Outcomes

The most powerful demonstration that human factors override natural ones is a pair of earthquakes that occurred six weeks apart in early 2010:

Haiti (12 January 2010)Chile (27 February 2010)
Magnitude7.08.8
Energy releasedBaseline~500× more than Haiti (1.8 magnitude units higher)
Deaths~230,000~525
GDP per capita~$1,200~$12,000
Building codesPoorly enforcedStrict seismic standards
Emergency responseOverwhelmed; reliant on international aidGovernment-coordinated within hours

Chile's earthquake was dramatically more powerful — yet resulted in 99.8% fewer deaths.

The difference was not the hazard. It was the quality of building stock, the speed and capacity of the emergency response, the prior investment in seismic-resistant infrastructure, and the governance systems that enforced safety standards.

This comparison is one of the most useful case studies in GCSE Geography. It can anchor any answer about hazard risk, development, or contrasting responses — whenever the question is phrased as "explain why hazards affect different countries differently."

Common Exam Mistakes

1. Defining a natural hazard as just "a natural event"

A natural event becomes a hazard through its impact on people. Omit the human dimension and a define question will not score the mark. The expected answer always includes: threat to people, property, or human activity.

2. Confusing hazard types

Tsunamis are tectonic — triggered by underwater earthquakes, not by weather. Flooding can be atmospheric (trigger: heavy rain) and geomorphological (process: river overtopping) simultaneously. The distinction matters when explaining causes.

3. Attributing hazard impact only to the event, not to vulnerability

"Haiti had more deaths because the earthquake was worse" is factually wrong — Chile's was stronger. Any answer that ignores human factors (development, building quality, governance) misses what the spec requires.

4. Listing factors without explaining how they affect risk

Saying "population density" scores one mark. "Higher population density means more people are exposed to the hazard, increasing the number of potential deaths and injuries" scores two. Identify the factor, then explain the mechanism.

5. Saying poor countries are "more affected" without explaining why

Level 1 answers say "they can't deal with it." Level 2 and 3 answers identify the specific mechanism: weaker building codes, fewer trained emergency responders, no early warning system, slower recovery due to limited government resources. Name the mechanism, not just the outcome.

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