Edexcel Geography B GCSE Paper 2 - Statistics

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  • The average score is 36 of 194
Answer Stats
Hint Answer % Correct
Three types of rock: ___ made from magma igneous
91%
over time, ___ builds up to create a flat area of new land sediment
89%
___ made from compressed sediment sedimentary
89%
___ another type of rock that was changed by heat or pressure metamorphic
83%
increased deposition on the riverbed when the river is ___ raise the riverbed upwards low
57%
it is found all over Britain. Clay landscapes are typically wide, flat plains with lots of bodies of ___ water
57%
both of these make rock more susceptible to ___ erosion
51%
___ shape becomes less steep | this creates interlocking spurs of land on either side of the V-shaped ___ valley
46%
when an arch collapses stack
43%
___ walls require minimal maintenance but block the view flood
40%
the river cuts down into the valley. if there are areas of hard rock which are ___ to erode, the river will bend around it hard/difficult/resistant
40%
clay is weak and ___ (water cannot move through it) | urbanisation means less water is absorbed (tarmac is ___) impermeable
40%
bottom half of the UK, made up mostly of sedimentary rock, forms ___ landscapes | it is only found in ___ Britain lowland
40%
when ^^ is eroded by wind and water stump
40%
top half of the UK, made up mostly of igneous and metamorphic rock, forms ___ landscapes upland
40%
hard rock: cliffs will be high, steep and rugged. landscapes include ___-cut platforms and headlands wave
40%
___ building density | ___ land value high
37%
after a while, the meander becomes sealed off from the main river: an ___ ___ oxbow lake
37%
chalk is strong and ___ (water moves through it) permeable
37%
where two caves erode back from either side of a headland and meet in the middle arch
34%
accumulation of sand and shingle formed by deposition beach
34%
caused by plants and animals, eg. when tree roots widen cracks in rocks biological
34%
formed when the waves erode a weakness in the headland cave
34%
when the rock's mineral composition is changed, eg. limestone being dissolved by the weak carbolic acid in rainwater chemical
34%
gradient becomes ___ steep | with soft rock landscapes, cliffs will be ___ rugged and steep. landscapes include bays less
34%
water travels faster on the ___ of the bend, this causes lateral erosion on the outside and deposition on the inside outside
34%
London is on the River ___ Thames
34%
rocks thrown against the coast during storms abrasion
31%
the rocks and pebbles carried by the waves rub together and break down attrition
31%
it is in western Europe, in the south-___ of the UK east
31%
most of the IMD indices show that city areas are ___ deprived than rural ones more
31%
forms an area of flat rock at the base of a cliff where the cliff once was: a wave-cut ___ platform
31%
when there is prolonged, heavy ___ in the region, the rivers flood and water spreads out on the valley floor and deposits the silt rain
31%
chemical action by seawater on some rocks. these 4 methods also apply to rivers | materials are dissolved in seawater and carried along in the flow solution
31%
narrow projection of sand or shingle that is attached to the land at one end spit
31%
has 6 major ___, including Heathrow airports
29%
___ form due to the rapid erosion by soft rock bays
29%
coasts made up of alternating rock types, parallel to the sea concordant
29%
prevents sea removing sand (but makes other areas of coastline more vulnerable and requires regular maintenance) groynes
29%
a wave-cut ___ can form between the high and low water lines notch
29%
however, the opposite is true for some ___ areas due to barriers to housing and services | settlements with fewer than 10,000 inhabitants rural
29%
wall that protects cliffs and buildings (but is expensive) sea wall
29%
improve public ___ systems and use environmentally friendly vehicles transport
29%
oldest part of the city, now dominated by modern buildings CBD
26%
different factors reduce the wave's energy and influence ___ by constructive waves | the bottom half was not covered in ice sheets but was influenced by glacial ___ | the neck of a meander will narrow as ___ occurs on the inside of the bend deposition
26%
weight and impact of water along the coast line eroding the coast hydraulic action
26%
more resistant rock is undercut, forming an ___ overhang
26%
when this can't be supported, blocks of rock fall down into a ___ ___ plunge pool
26%
soft rock is easily eroded, but hard rock is more ___ resistant
26%
smaller stones bounced along the seabed saltation
26%
less resistant rock is eroded more quickly, leaving a 'step' - the ___ waterfall
26%
longshore drift process: waves approach the coast at an ___ angle
23%
also formed by longshore drift depositing material in a ridge, but grow right across the bay bar
23%
areas in the north-east were affected by the ___ mines being closed and now earn much lower wages in new industries coal
23%
the speed of a river ___ as it approaches the sea decreases
23%
coasts made up of alternating rock types, perpendicular to the sea discordant
23%
internal migrants are often recent university ___ graduates
23%
three types of weathering: (freeze-thaw. water freezes in rock cracks and expands. over time, crack widens, pieces of rock fall off) mechanical
23%
in rural areas, people often work more in the ___ sector and get lower wages primary
23%
case study: the river ___. going downstream: Severn
23%
large boulders being moved along the seabed by waves traction
23%
negatives: too ___ for poorer residents, cities lose individuality due to similar strategies nationwide expensive
20%
this forms a wide, flat ___ floodplain
20%
discharge, depth and velocity ___ increase
20%
the different in time between the peak of the rainstorm and the peak of the river discharge lag time
20%
after many floods, the deposits on the bank build up, forming ___ | hard engineering strategies: embankments and ___ blend in with surroundings but may burst and cause widespread flooding levees
20%
area developed mainly in the early 1900s where improvements in transport allowed people to commute suburbs
20%
sand and small particles carried along in the flow suspension
20%
___ have been cleared to make way for agricultural land trees
20%
interlocking spurs: in the upper course of the river there is more ___ erosion vertical
20%
___ carries sand and gravel back down the beach at 90 degrees to the coastline due to gravity backwash
17%
___ change will increase UK flood risk as baking or freezing soil can't absorb water increasing runoff | wave ___ (how powerful waves are, direction, fetch, height, etc) climate
17%
___ and reservoirs control the flow of water but are expensive dams
17%
very well-connected railway, including lines that lead to the rest of ___ Europe
17%
the top half of the UK was ___ during the last Ice Age glaciated
17%
the waterfall retreats, leaving a steep-sided ___ gorge
17%
___ is hard and resistant to erosion but is susceptible to chemical weathering granite
17%
ICZM: integrated coastal zone ___ management
17%
bends in the river's course meanders
17%
waterfall formation: a band of ___ resistant rock lies over ___ resistant rock more less
17%
number of people per square kilometer population density
17%
___ pushes sand and gravel up the beach at the same angle swash
17%
The line separating the North and the South geologically Tees-Exe
17%
benefits of TNCs (___ ___): bring investment, thousands of jobs and new technologies transnational corporations
17%
making urban living more sustainable: reduce ___ by reusing/recycling waste
17%
increases infiltration due to more vegetation afforestation
14%
human activity: ___ - drainage ditches are built to drain water away from low-lying land to allow crops to grow agriculture
14%
extra sand added to reduce wave energy and maintain tourism beach replenishment
14%
this is a ___ delta
14%
not having access to the same resources and opportunities as other people deprivation
14%
they have a ___ bottom and ___ sides flat steep
14%
clays, sands and silts eroded by ___ up north were dumped and washed over southern areas glaciers
14%
___ is the dominant land use and is mostly detached or semi detached (low density) housing
14%
rural areas are changing due to: house prices ___ because people can afford to live there and commute to the city increasing/rising
14%
cut off the water to form a ___ lagoon
14%
most ___ are working age adults migrants
14%
benefits of ___: new jobs, better access to services, derelict buildings are repurposed/rebuilt regeneration
14%
where the city meets the countryside rural-urban fringe
14%
runoff is greater and faster on ground with less ___ as plants use water vegetation
14%
sand and gravel move along the beach in a ___ pattern zigzag
14%
industries moving out of cities to cheaper locations deindustrialisation
11%
it is impermeable so landscapes made of this rock have poor ___ drainage
11%
build new housing that is affordable and energy ___ efficient
11%
river ___ can reduce flooding downstream restoration
11%
increasing flood risk: more impermeable soils and rocks will increase ___ runoff
11%
these 4 are ___ processes and also apply to rivers transportation
11%
supports ethnic shops and services, like banks and places of ___ worship
11%
___ people move to the city, ___ people move to rural areas young old/younger older
11%
___ conditions: when the ground is already saturated with water, further rain flows as runoff straight into the river | increased frequency of storms means more water flowing into the river and increasing ___ conditions antecedent
9%
flood ___ can be moved to where they're needed and quickly erected but don't provide long-lasting protection barriers
9%
use ___ sites for development to improve appearance of those areas and create new green spaces brownfield
9%
it forms ___ when it occurs at coastlines cliffs
9%
___ form when water erodes a fault in the hard rock and breaks through to the soft rock, eroding it coves
9%
this is for 3 reasons: helps protect migrants against ___ discrimination
9%
not doing anything and allowing homes and land to be lost do nothing
9%
negatives: ___ problems abroad might mean production gets shut down in the UK leading to unemployment economic
9%
the ___ quality is high and there's lots of green space environmental
9%
scores and then ranks small areas across the whole UK for a range of different measures of deprivation index of multiple deprivation
9%
part of the city developed in the 19th century when industry was located on the outskirts of London inner city
9%
it is connected to the rest of the UK by ___ which all lead to London motorways
9%
local currents and tidal ___ (difference in height between low and high tide) range
9%
___ ___ ___ with misfit rivers were expanded by glacial action u shaped valleys
9%
when a city has expanded outwards and absorbed smaller settlements that used to be separate conurbation
6%
armchair shaped hollows formed on the sides of mountains corries
6%
zones with tax cuts and faster broadband to attract businesses enterprise zones
6%
UK governments have encouraged ___ by privatising industries and allowing foreign companies to buy them FDI
6%
human activity: ___ - planting, managing and caring for forests forestry
6%
small cracks in rock joints
6%
floodplain ___ provides somewhere for the floodwater to go, is attractive, provides spaces for leisure and recreation retention
6%
human activity: ___ - they grew up where the landscape offered particular advantages for life settlement
6%
if a spot is ___ (eg. in a bay) | when formed, these are left ___ by headlands and so are less eroded sheltered
6%
international ones may be ___: often white, highly trained professionals from the US, EU, Australia or South Africa skilled
6%
when rock (often clay) is saturated with water and slides down a curved slip plane slumping
6%
particles of soil slowly moving down the sides of the valley under the influence of gravity soil creep
6%
high precipitation over impermeable rocks in the Lake District forms ___ | the river splits and spreads out into many different ___ due to the very shallow gradient streams
6%
when large numbers of young people become residents in student accommodation or other houses and flats studentification
6%
settlement areas around the edge of the urban core urban fringe
6%
conditions being ___ calm
3%
often ___ of particular ethnic communities develop clusters
3%
where the coastline moves further inland coastal retreat
3%
the headlands are more vulnerable to erosion now because wave energy is ___ there concentrated
3%
after ___ which meant ships were too large for the docks, London's docklands were closed down containerisation
3%
they extend across a bay or ___ or where the coastline changes direction estuary
3%
however, the UK is a member of the EEA (___ ___ __) and cannot restrict the movement of EEA citizens to the UK European Economic Area
3%
larger cracks in rock faults
3%
lower course: as the river floods, the water slows down, and deposits heavy silt particles to form ___ floodplains
3%
eg. natural harbours were sites for fishing villages, springs gave people reliable ___ freshwater
3%
how fast coastal erosion occurs is influenced by: ___ levels (saturated cliffs are more vulnerable) groundwater
3%
maintain the existing shoreline hold the line
3%
the overhanging rock collapses and the cliff retreats ___ inland
3%
in lowland, rivers have ___ and eroded a wide valley between low hills meandered
3%
they have since been ___ mostly into offices regenerated
3%
where the EU invests in poorer regions to help them grow: EU ___ ___ fund regional development
3%
the increase in discharge is shown by the ___ ___ rising limb
3%
___ are formed from shale. these rocks split easily schists
3%
unstable sleep mountain slope composed of rock fragments scree slope
3%
the rivers transport ___ eroded from the channel silt
3%
towers of granite chemically weathered into blocks tors
3%
may be ___: do jobs unwanted by UK workers or with unsocial hours. From the EU, India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, West Africa unskilled
3%
central part of a conurbation urban core
3%
the river is ___ miles long 220
0%
bring the existing shoreline out further advance the line
0%
little housing. what there is is mostly ___ apartments
0%
is expanding: a second CBD is forming at ___ ___ Canary Wharf
0%
___ shape becomes wider and flatter channel
0%
more businesses developing away from the urban core decentralisation
0%
helps to preserve cultural ___ with some even having cultural festivals, such as Notting Hill Carnival distinctiveness/pride/sanctity
0%
when wealthier people move into deprived city areas where property is cheap gentrification
0%
some areas have become ___ due to their proximity to central London gentrified
0%
a gentle ___ offshore causing friction gradient
0%
sprawled outwards until the introduction of ___ greenbelt
0%
most accessible area due to the UK's ___ road system radial
0%
___ old buildings to enhance appeal of the area and improve energy efficiency renovate
0%
most migrants seek cheap, ___ accommodations rented
0%
when loosened rocks and soil suddenly tumble down a slope sliding
0%
reduces mass movement and slippage, but the foot of the cliff is still vulnerable slope stabilisation
0%
move people and activities inland strategic realignment
0%
___ in Gloucestershire frequently experiences flooding from the Severn Tewkesbury
0%
in the 50s and 60s, many ___ ___ were built and to try and redevelop the inner city. there are also many terraced houses (historically for the workers) tower blocks
0%
___ air quality in the UK due to traffic worst
0%
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