Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

REMEMBERING 2O10’s EARTHQUAKES AND TSUNAMIS Walter Hays, Global Alliance for Disaster Reduction, University of North Carolina, USA.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "REMEMBERING 2O10’s EARTHQUAKES AND TSUNAMIS Walter Hays, Global Alliance for Disaster Reduction, University of North Carolina, USA."— Presentation transcript:

1 REMEMBERING 2O10’s EARTHQUAKES AND TSUNAMIS Walter Hays, Global Alliance for Disaster Reduction, University of North Carolina, USA

2 IMPACTED NATIONS Haiti, Chile (Pacific Rim Nations), Turkey, Indonesia, China, Iran, …

3 SOCIETAL IMPACTS DURING 2010 Over two hundred-twenty thousand people killed and even more injured. Millions of homes without power, damaged, or destroyed. Millions displaced, and their lives and livelihoods adversely affected. Importance of building codes with seismic design provisions highlighted. Infrastructure damaged and destroyed. Health care needs sharply increased. $ Tens of billions in insured and uninsured economic losses.

4 EARTHQUAKES HAITI CHILE TURKEY INDONESIA CHINA TAIWAN IRAN

5 M7.0 EARTHQUAKE STRIKES HAITI THE WESTERN HEMISPHERE’S POOREST NATION WITH 8 IN 10 AT POVERTY LEVEL 4:53 p.m.; JANUARY 12, 2010

6 THE HAITI EARTHQUAKE AND THE CARIBBEAN PLATE

7 PORT AU PRINCE: 1.8 MILLION IN A NATION OF NINE MILLION

8 DAMAGE DISTRIBUTION

9 SOCIETAL IMPACTS The lives of 3 million+ Haitians were adversely impacted. The Dominion Republic, Haiti’s neighbor, which experienced a M8.0 earthquake and tsunami in 1946 on a thrust fault, escaped with minimal impacts, but remains at high risk in future quakes.

10 CATASTROPHIC DEATH TOLL OF 220,000+ The estimate of 220,000+ casualties became reality after burial in mass graves and search and rescue by Haitian and Int’l teams ended, and the rubble of thousands of collapsed buildings was cleared.

11 EXAMPLE OF DAMAGE: PORT AU PRINCE

12 COLLAPSE OF UN BUILDING; PORT AU PRINCE

13 DEATH TOLL REACHED AN ESTIMATED 220,OOO+

14 INFRASTRUCTURE DAMAGE Power was knocked out. Communication was disrupted. Utility service was interrupted. Roads were damaged. The airport’s control tower was badly damaged, limiting useage. The port was damaged.

15 PORT: TOPPLED CONTAINERS

16 HAITI’S POOREST OF THE POOR IN TENT CITIES FOR MONTHS

17 M8.8 EARTHQUAKE STRIKES CENTRAL CHILE: 3:34 am on February 27, 2010 Subduction Zone Quake 500 Times More Energy than the M7.0 Haiti Quake 800+ Deaths; 500+ Injured Numerous Aftershocks Tsunami Waves Travel Across Pacific Estimated Loss: $30 Billion

18 LOCATION: 330 KM (200 MI) FROM SANTIAGO

19 LOCATION: 100 KM FROM CONCEPCION; 330 KM FROM SANTIAGO

20 The Chilean people had to cope with the demands associated with: 1) a mega-quake, 2) a vigorous aftershock sequence with large events, 3) tsunami wave run up, 4) looting by some of the affluent sector, and 5) recovery after the loss of 15 percent of the GDP.

21 DAMAGED BUILDING IN CONCEPCION

22 CONCEPCION: URGENT MASS CARE NEEDS

23 CONCEPCION: LOOTERS

24 CONCEPCION: ELEVATED HIGHWAY COLLAPSED

25 TSUNAMI (after the Chile earthquake) LOCAL AND PACIFIC- WIDE IMPACTS FROM THE FEBRUARY 27, 2010 CHILE EARTHQUAKE

26 TSUNAMI WAVES MOVE ACROSS THE PACIFIC

27 LOCAL TSUNAMI DAMAGE

28 M7.7 EARTHQUAKE STRIKES INDONESIA NEAR EPICENTER OF 2004 QUAKE SUBDUCTION ZONE OF SUNDA AND INDO-AUSTRALIA PLATES 5:15 AM, APRIL 7, 2010

29 This earthquake, although much less powerful than the 2004 earthquake, awakened memories of the December 26, 2004 earthquake and Indian Ocean tsunami that killed over 216,000 people in 14 countries and caused losses of over $10 B.

30 LOCATION

31 THE SLAB MODEL OF THE SUBDUCTION ZONE (USGS)

32 TOWN OF SINABANG (60 KM FROM EPICENTER)

33 The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center issued a watch for tsunamis in Sumatra and Indian Ocean countries, but a destructive ocean surge never happened.

34 M6.1 EARTHQUAKE STRIKES EASTERN TURKEY AT 4:32 AM THREE VILLAGES DESTROYED ALONG WITH MANY FARM ANIMALS AT LEAST 57 DEAD MARCH 8, 2010

35 Turkey has a long history of damaging earthquakes. The quake struck the in Elazig province at 4:32 am, leaving the village of Okcular and two others devastated.

36 LOCATION MAP

37 The earthquake occurred near the intersection of the Northern Anatolian and the East Anatolian faults.

38 NORTH AND EAST ANATOLIAN FAULTS

39 The pre-dawn earthquake struck as residents slept, shaking the poorly made buildings into piles of rubble and causing survivors to flee into the narrow streets to escape the aftershocks. TRAPPED WHILE SLEEPING

40 OKCULAR: POOR CONSTRUCTION

41 AN INTRAPLATE, M6.9 EARTHQUAKE STRIKES WESTERN CHINA STRONG AFTERSHOCKS FOLLOWED THE MAIN SHOCK 7:49 AM OCCURRENCE WAS DEADLY FOR SCHOOL CHILDREN APRIL 14, 2010

42 This earthquake didn't occur where the Indo-Australia and Eurasia plates meet; instead, it was an intraplate earthquake, occurring in the Tibetan plateau within the Eurasian plate. The Tibetan Plateau was created, along with the Himalayas, about 50 million years ago, as part of the Indian subcontinent began to collide with Eurasia.

43 The M7.9 Wenchuan earthquake that occurred on May 12, 2008 in Sichuan Province, which was 32 x stronger, was generated on the Longmenshan fault system.

44

45 The earthquake was centered in the township of Jiegu, in the county of Yushu, a rural, mountainous area that is part of the Tibetan Plateau populated mainly by farmers, sheepherders, and trades people. Qamdo, Tibet is the largest city near the epicenter.

46 LOCATION: QINGHAI PROVINCE NEAR TIBET

47 QINGHAI PROVINCE

48 YUSHU COUNTY: QAMDO, TIBET IS THE LARGEST NEARBY CITY

49 More than 90 % of the sun-dried mud brick and wood houses and buildings in the epicentral area collapsed, killing an estimated 1,144 people and injuring about 10,000..

50 NO QUAKE RESISTANCE

51 An estimated 70 % percent of the schools were destroyed, and residents, paramilitary, and soldiers used shovels in a frantic effort to save children trapped in the rumble.

52 SEARCH AND RESCUE

53 TYPICAL DAMAGE

54 The minority nationalities living in the epicentral region don't normally keep the dead overnight, so the funerals that occurred April 14 th will make accurate estimates of the death toll impossible. Communication and transportation systems in the area were knocked out, slowing local disaster assistance and search and rescue efforts, and limiting international assistance.

55 SURVIVORS FACED HARSH TEMPERATURES

56 Temperatures in the mountainous Tibetan plateau 5 km above sea level can reach minus six degrees at night, so the government quickly arranged to send five thousand tents and fifty thousand blankets for the homeless survivors. The government allocated $30 million for relief and mobilized more than 5,000 soldiers, medical workers and other rescue workers to join with 700 troops already on the ground.

57 TAIWAN: APRIL 26, 2010

58 APRIL 26, 2010 M6.5 EARTHQUAKE AND 3- DAYS OF RAIN CREATE CONDITIONS FOR LANDSLIDES

59 LANDSLIDE

60

61 SEARCH AND RESCUE

62 DECEMBER 21, 2010 M6.5 EARTHQUAKE STRIKES SOUTHEASTERN IRAN

63 The M6.5 earthquake, centered near the location of the 2003 Bam quake in southeastern Iran, killed at least 11, damaged 1,800 homes, downed phone lines, and triggered landslides. Almost exactly seven years ago in the same region, a M6.6 earthquake struck the nearby city of Bam, killing more than 25,000 people and destroying a medieval castle that was one of Iran's most treasured archaeological sites.


Download ppt "REMEMBERING 2O10’s EARTHQUAKES AND TSUNAMIS Walter Hays, Global Alliance for Disaster Reduction, University of North Carolina, USA."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google