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Floods: Rising Waters and You

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Overview
Grade Level: 9-12
Background Information:

Every year people in the world spend immense sums of money controlling water flow and paying for damage from floods. As the world gets more populated, more people live in low lying areas adjacent to rivers and oceans. Meanwhile, sea level is rising and development and deforestation cause more catastrophic floods to occur, placing more lives at risk. What follows are several activities that allow students to investigate the relationships between human-made structures and flood waters. These are linked to an e-lesson giving background on and to videos showing some of the natural features associated with both normal and catastrophic floods.

Content Standards
Related National Standards

This lesson addresses the following National Content Standards found at: http://books.nap.edu/html/nses

Content Standard D: As a result of their activities in grades 9-12, all students should develop an understanding of:

  • Understand the origin and evolution of the Earth system
    • Interactions among the solid earth, the oceans, the atmosphere, and organisms have resulted in the ongoing evolution of the Earth system

Content Standard E: As a result of their activities in grades 9-12, all students should develop an understanding of:

  • Develop abilities of technological design · Develop understandings about science and technology
    • Scientists in different disciplines ask different questions, use different methods of investigation, and accept different types of evidence to support their explanations.

Content Standard F: As a result of their activities in grades 9-12, all students should develop an understanding of:

  • Natural and human-induced hazards
    • Some hazards, such as earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, and severe weather are rapid and spectacular. But there are slow and progressive changes that also result in problems for individuals and societies. For example, change in stream channel position, erosion of bridge foundations, sedimentation in lakes and harbors, coastal erosions, and continuing erosion and wasting of soil and landscapes can all negatively affect society.
Related Oregon Standards

This lesson addresses the following Oregon Science Standards found at: http://www.ode.state.or.us/cifs/

  • Explain changes occurring within the lithosphere, hydrosphere, and atmosphere of the Earth
  • Formulate and express scientific questions or hypotheses to be investigated
  • Design scientific investigations to address and explain questions or hypotheses
  • Collect, organize, and display scientific data
  • Analyze scientific information to develop and present
  • Understand that both patterns of change and stability are important in the natural world
  • Understand that scientific knowledge is subject to change based on new findings and results of scientific observation and experimentation

 

Extension Web Sites from PBS:

Rivers of Destiny
An excellent teacher resource for having students understand the impact of humans on rivers and the dangers of flooding. A great number of links are provided at this site.

Flood!
This site considers the consequences of flooding as well as the benefits to human civilization. It is thorough and comprehensive. It includes teacher resources.

Great Wall Across the Yangtze
This site tells the story of the damning of the Yangtze River in China. It discusses the impacts on both humans and the environment. It includes several teacher resources.

 

Activity 1: E-Sheet Introduction to Floods
Time Allotted:

One 45 minute class period

Materials:

E-sheet, Access to the Internet

Objectives:
  • Students will use the internet to research terms and facts associated with floods.
  • Students will compare and contrast normal flood events with catastrophic floods.
Watch the AFG Video Segments:

Missoula Flood - Part 1
During the ice age, glacial ice dams across the Northwest caused rivers to flood on a massive scale, leaving topography that resembles a giant riverbed.

Missoula Flood - Part 2
The effects of the ice age floods across much of the Northwest can most readily be seen from the air.

Missoula Flood - Part 3
During the ice age, the Missoula Flood transported vast amounts of rich soil from eastern Washington to western Oregon.

Discussion Questions for Video Segments:
  • The Missoula Floods began with failure of an ice dam. Describe how this process happened.
  • How were the features produced by the Missoula Floods similar to those produced by normal river systems? How were they different?
E-Sheet Activity:

Have students complete the E-Sheet on floods. For this activity, students will need to have access to the Internet. They can work individually or in small groups. The students will be asked to access several web sites related to floods and use the information they find to answer the questions on the E-sheet.

Assessment:

Use the E-Sheet Answer Key to review your students' answers.

Activity 2: Stream Table Experiments
Time Allotted:

45-minutes each experiment

Materials:
  • Stream Tables (may be purchased or see Stream Table Instructions)
  • Sand
  • Water source
  • Rulers
  • Rocks, plastic barriers, wood blocks
  • Small houses (e.g. monopoly houses or home-made ones of a similar size)
  • Stopwatches
  • Plastic grid to fit over the stream table (optional for the further ideas with stream tables. This grid is useful for measuring the size and shape of a river and of the delta produced)
Objectives:
  • Students will experiment with materials to try to control water flow.
  • Students will observe processes related to dam and levee failure.
  • Students will experiment with materials to try to control water flow.
  • Students will experiment to determine the hazards associated with rivers at different water levels.
Teacher Instructions
  1. Arrange stream table set-ups as described in the instructions below.
  2. Handout Lab Activity Student Instruction sheets.
  3. Divide students into groups of 2-4 students each depending on your materials available and let them follow the instructions.
Watch the AFG Video Segment:

Rafting on the Grand Teton River
The collapse of the Grand Teton Dam in the mid 1970s was followed by tragic consequences, but also improved conditions for river rafting.

 

Discussion Questions for Video Segment:
  • How did this dam collapse?
  • How were the materials in and around the dam similar and different to the materials you used in your lab?
  • How did the collapse of this dam permanently change this landscape?
Activity 3: Living on a Meander--Will the Rising Water Get My House?
Time Allotted:

45-minute period

Materials:

Same as for Activity 2

Objectives:
  • Students will identify physical features associated with floods.
  • Students will experiment to determine the hazards associated with rivers at different water levels.

Teacher Instructions
  1. Arrange stream table set-ups as described in the instructions below.
  2. Handout Lab Activity Student Instruction sheets.
  3. Divide students into groups of 2-4 students each depending on your materials available and let them follow the instructions.
Watch the AFG Video Segment:

Congaree Swamp - River Bottom
A wide variety of insects, especially butterflies and dragonflies, can be found in the river bottom regions of the Congaree Swamp.

 

Discussion Questions for Video Segment:
  • The video refers to an oxbow lake in the beginning. Where did the narrator say that the river was in relationship to the oxbow?
  • From what you have demonstrated and read, when might an oxbow be formed?
  • The river has an impact on the type of sediments in the flood plain which in turn, affect the habitat. How do you think sediments (e.g. gravel, sand, silt, mud) might change as you get farther away from the river. How might this affect the types of plants that grow in these areas?
Further Ideas for Experiments with the Stream Tables:
  • With high school students, focus on the idea of controls and variables. Have students work in groups to design and conduct an experiment testing only one variable. Some examples of variables include: velocity, slope, sediment type, obstructions, time, channel shape, and topography. Grade lab reports using the Scoring Guide rubric (attached).
  • For another activity about levees see the Nova website Overflowing the Banks.
Extension Ideas for Younger Students

Research floods on the Nile River. How do the people of Egypt take advantage of the nutrients provided by flood waters?

Extension Ideas for Older Students

Research paradigm shifts in science and relate to the work of J. Harlan Bretz.