Title: Natural Hazards
1Natural Hazards
2Introduction to Natural Hazards
- What is a Geohazard?
- Earth processes (involving the lithosphere,
hydrosphere atmosphere) that, upon interaction
with human activity, cause loss of life and
property - It is important to understand the human element
- without it, there would be no hazard
- because of it, the science of geohazards becomes
more important every year - mitigation reduction/prevention
Hazardousconditionor result
geo-process
humanprocess
3Why is the human element so critical?
- The Earths population is increasing
- more people living in hazard-prone areas
- populations are becoming hyper-concentrated
- consumption of resources
- examples
- today there are 6 billion people on Earth ( 50
live in cities) - by 2025, there will be 8 billion people ( 66
in cities) - of these cities, 40 are coastal
- prone to severe storm and tsunami damage
- and a large majority lie in areas subject to
other geohazards (for example volcanoes and
earthquakes)
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5- CANNOT stop the geologic processes
- CANNOT stop the population growth/expansion
- Therefore, we must try to reduce (mitigate) the
hazards through - scientific study
- population education
- changes in engineering/building practices
- management plans and hazard response scenarios
6Types of Natural Hazards
- Volcanoes, floods, earthquakes, tornadoes,
tsunamis, etc. - can act adversely on human processes
- can occur
- without warning (e.g. earthquakes)
- with warnings (precursors) (e.g. satellite
monitoring of cyclone tracks, or the presence of
ground deformation at a volcano before an
eruption)
7- To help mitigate the hazard we need to know
- Frequency vs. Magnitude
- F how often a given event occurs in a certain
region - M how powerful (amount of energy released) an
event is - for example, high M hazards happen with low F,
but are much more destructive - Scope
- S area affected by a given hazard
- local landslides, floods, earthquakes, fire
- regional tsunamis, volcanoes, larger
earthquakes, cyclones - global large volcanoes, global warming,
meteorite impacts
8Practical Exercise 1.
- Impact of Environmental Disasters
9Earthquakes and Tsunamis
10What is an Earthquake?
- Ground movement caused by the sudden release of
seismic energy due to tectonic forces.
The focus of an earthquake is the actual location
of the energy released inside the Earths
crust. The epicentre is the point on the Earths
surface directly above the focus.
11Why do earthquakes occur?
- Seismic energy is usually caused by the brittle
failure (fracturing) of rocks under stress. - This commonly occurs due to movement along
tectonic plate boundaries
Figure showing the distribution of earthquakes
around the globe
12Earthquake Magnitude
Magnitude Earthquake Effects Approx. number each year
lt 2.5 Usually not felt, but recorded 900,000
2.5-5.4 Often felt, only minor damage 30,000
5.5-6.0 Slight damage to buildings and other structures 500
6.1-6.9 May cause a lot of damage in very populated areas 100
7.0-7.9 Major earthquake. Serious damage. 20
gt 8.0 Great earthquake. Can be totally destructive near the epicentre. 1 every 5-10 years
13San Francisco - Great Earthquake
14Earthquake Hazards
- These are important hazards to understand
- the natural hazard that on average kills the
highest number of people per year (gt 1 million
during the past century) - commonly strikes without warning
- no time for evacuation
- not a predictable trend to earthquake numbers,
magnitude or location - 1000's of large earthquakes every year
- 20 are gt M7.0 and these account for 90 of the
energy released and 80 of all the fatalities
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16How do we mitigate the hazard from earthquakes?
- Reinforce buildings
- Education
- Disaster plan
17Earthquakes and Tsunamis
- An earthquake under the ocean has the potential
to form a tsunami. - The earthquake must vertically displace overlying
water (extensional or compressional faults - not
transform)
Extension
Compression
Transform
18How does an earthquake form a tsunami?
192004 South Asian Boxing Day event
- Biggest earthquake in 40 years!
- Magnitude 9.2
- 150 km off the west of Northern Sumatra
- Generated a disastrous tsunami in 12 countries
20Second largest recorded earthquake
- The earthquake occurred at a convergent tectonic
plate boundary (subduction zone) - An estimated 1,600 km (994 miles) of faultline
slipped about 15 m (50 ft)! - The earthquake released 20 x 1017 Joules of
energy - Equivalent to
- 475,000,000 kg of TNT
- 23,000 Hiroshima atomic bombs!
21Tsunami
Animations of the Boxing Day tsunami showing how
the tsunami radiated from the entire length of
the 1,600 km (994 miles) rupture.
Above Countries most effected by the tsunami
22A village near the coast of Sumatra lays in ruin
after the tsunami.
23How do we mitigate the hazard from tsunamis?
- Monitoring
- process is very technology-intensive
- high costs for many poorer countries
- often no technology available to monitor local
tsunamis - for example,
- Papua New Guinea has no monitoring stations
- reliant on the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center
- tsunami in 1998 was not detected
24How do we mitigate the hazard from tsunamis?
- Building restrictions in hazard prone areas
- In Hawaii, Hilo harbor and downtown was destroyed
by the tsunamis of 1946 and 1960 - The town is now rebuilt on higher ground and the
devastated area is a park
25How do we mitigate the hazard from tsunamis?
- Seawall construction
- cause early wave breaking
- prevent wave run up into urban areas
26How do we mitigate the hazard from tsunamis?
- Education
- warning systems
- evacuation plans
- general understanding of the hazards involved
Punishment From God 45
Natural event 35
Bomb 20
Population reaction Papua New Guinea (1998)
27Practical Exercise 2.
- Locating Earthquake Epicentres
28Tropical Storms
29Same Storm - Different Name
30Tropical Cyclones
- Background
- Can be deadly!
- For example, in 1991 a large cyclone in
Bangladesh killed gt138,000 people in just two
days!
31Tropical Cyclones
- Most widespread destructive weather hazard
- For example Hurricane Floyd (1999)
- only a moderate level hurricane
- caused US5.6 billion in damage in the Bahamas
and North Carolina (USA) and 57 fatalities
(Left) Three different cyclones spinning over the
western Pacific Ocean on August 7, 2006.
32How do cyclones form?
The above figure shows how cyclones form. The
green arrows show where warm air is rising. The
red arrows indicate where cool air is sinking.
33Cyclone Categories
Category Wind Speed (mph) Damage at Landfall Storm Surge (feet)
1 74-95 Minimal 4-5
2 96-110 Moderate 6-8
3 111-130 Extensive 9-12
4 131-155 Extreme 13-18
5 gt 155 Catastrophic 19
The Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale
34Hurricane Katrina
- Hurricane Katrina was the most costly and most
deadly hurricane in the history of the USA. - Category 5
- At least 1,836 fatalities
- Damage estimated at US 81.2 billion
35Hurricane Katrina
36What damage is produced?
- Storm Surge
- water that is pushed toward the shore by the
force of the cyclone winds.
37What damage is produced?
- Wind
- responsible for the loss of power and utilities
- wind damage affects larger areas than surge
- flying debris
- tree loss
38What damage is produced?
- Flying debris
- debris propelled at high speeds
39How do we mitigate the hazard from a cyclone?
- Monitoring
- early warning systems
- Infrastructure
- cyclone walls
- communal shelters
- Education and planning
40Natural Hazards Summary
Graph showing the number of deaths per year due
to natural hazard events