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Natural Disasters Global Geography 12.

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Presentation on theme: "Natural Disasters Global Geography 12."— Presentation transcript:

1 Natural Disasters Global Geography 12

2 Natural Hazards vs. Natural Disaster
Hazards: aspects of the physical world that have potential to cause harm Hazard event: the hazard in action Disasters: occurs when the Hazard is activated and destroys human communities

3 Natural Disasters

4 Disturbing Trends: Natural disasters around the world have been causing more deaths and injuries and wiping out more buildings and cultivated land than ever before. WHY?

5 Factors used to profile Natural Disasters:
Frequency Duration Extent Speed of onset Spatial dispersion Temporal Spacing

6 Four Categories used to Compare Disasters:
# of people affected Property loss Size of the area affected Duration of the event

7 Three Categories of Natural Disasters:
Brainstorm types of natural disasters How would you group them? How do scientists group them? Atmospheric Biological Geological

8 What determines RISK? RISK = hazard + vulnerability of population
death-map-usa-natural-disaster-hotspots- revealed.html

9 Vulnerable populations: who is most likely to suffer and why?
Obvious answer: people that live where there are hazards. Real question: when a disaster happens, who is most affected? List of suggestions?

10 Hurricane Katrina: 2005, $31.1 billion dollars
One of the worst disasters in US history, Hurricane Katrina made landfall along the Gulf Coast on Aug. 25. By the time it reached New Orleans a few days later, the Category 5 storm had developed enough power to break the city's levees and cause widespread flooding, death and property damage.

11 Katrina death toll: As of May 19, 2006, the confirmed death toll (total of direct and indirect deaths) stood at 1,836, mainly from Louisiana (1,577) and Mississippi (238).However, 705 people remain categorized as missing in Louisiana, and many of the deaths are indirect, but it is almost impossible to determine the exact cause of some of the fatalities.

12 Flood Waters

13 City Underwater

14 Pleas from Survivors

15 The Superdome

16 The Tsunami – Southeast Asia 2004

17 2004 Indian Ocean Earthquake
Undersea earthquake Magnitude 9.0 (Moment magnitude scale) NOAA

18 Epicenter 150 KM west of Sumatra

19 Some people think a tsunami is like the image on the left…but it is more like the image to the right.

20 Actual video of the Tsunami
YouTube - Tsunami Thailand (Koh Phi Phi) – 2004

21 Aftermath…

22 European Heat Wave 2003 Highest death toll from natural hazards in 50 years. With a death toll estimated to exceed , the heat wave of 2003 is one of the ten deadliest natural disasters in Europe for the last 100 years and the worst in the last 50 years. Elderly people were most affected.

23 No escape from the heat…

24 Hurricane Juan

25

26 Path of destruction

27 What was “White Juan”? White Juan was the unofficial name given to the Atlantic Canada blizzard of February 2004. It was a strong nor'easter that affected most of Atlantic Canada between February 17 and 20, 2004—only five months after Hurricane Juan devastated central Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island. The storm coated much of the Nova Scotia peninsula and Prince Edward Island with 50 to 100 centimeters of snow.

28 White Juan

29 JAPAN: 2011 EARTHQUAKE, TSUMANI, NUCLEAR DISASTER
ed lated earthquake-tsunami-video


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