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Natural Hazards and Disasters
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Natural Hazard A natural hazards are aspects of the physical world that have a potential to be dangerous to people A natural hazard is a disaster waiting to happen. Examples New Orleans is below sea level
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Natural Disaster Occurs when a hazard is activated. Examples include dormant volcanoes that become active.
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Irony Disasters tend to occur more frequently in highly populated areas. This is a result of people needing access to water and the coast. They need to be linked to other markets by the oceans. Coastal areas are usually where tectonic plates exist.
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Evaluating by Grid System Used to create a profile of a disaster. Measured using the following components Frequency Duration Areal Extent Speed of onset Spatial dispersion Temporal Spacing
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Frequency How often an event might happen. Example: greater chance of a blizzard in Newfoundland than Egypt This will affect the way people handle and prepare for a disaster.
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Duration Length of time the disaster exists Earthquakes have a short duration Droughts can last months Badger Newfoundland
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Badger NF Bad
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Badger NF Really Bad
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Extent Disaster can affect large or small areas. Tornados usually affect a small area Hurricanes can travel long distances and affect a wide area.
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Spatial dispersion This is the likelihood of a disaster affecting an area. Areas below sea level are more likely to flood Areas located around warmer waters and bays increase the strength of storms.
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Temporal Spacing This refers to how predictable the occurances of the disaster is. Hurricane season occurs around the same time each year between June 1 – Nov.30 Earthquakes are random and can happen any time
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Atmospheric Hazards Storms occur when opposite air masses collide rapidly forming winds and precipitation. This is called a storm front. The severity is determined by the differences between the two air masses. When a very cold air mass collides with a very hot, a greater storm will occur.
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Tropical Cyclones These occur in equatorial regions. They originate over the ocean and move by the prevailing winds. They gain intensity as they travel over warm and cold waters. These are also known as hurricanes, typhoons in Asia
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Tornadoes Tornadoes originate over land Triggered when warm humid air is forced to rise over cold drier air The result is a twisted storm with winds blowing in opposite directions forming a cone shape Tornado winds can move up to 500 km/hr
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Floods Floods occur usually in populations that are close to rivers or lakes Happen in spring when there is an increase in melting and precipitation Also occur from ocean surges on coastal areas.
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Drought Droughts occur in the hot summer months when there is little or no rainfall This disaster has claimed the most lives and occurs in the poorer areas of the world The Sahel in Sub Saharan Africa
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Biological Hazards These are disease outbreaks that affect millions of people and can last many years Have disastrous affects on LDCs that cannot afford vaccines, medications, and disease prevention education. 2.2 million people die a year from measles and malaria even though we have a cure
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80% of all diseases in the LDCs are a result of a lack of clean drinking water. Diseases are also spread through mosquitoes. This is particularly harmful since most LDCs cannot afford basic mosquito nets or techniques to kill mosquitoes
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Geological Hazards Earthquakes Most violent and sudden of geological hazards Occurs when tectonic plates collide Particularly devastating in LDCs because they are highly populated Also do not have well built structures of infrastructure
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Volcanoes Volcanoes are generally not as destructive as the other disasters They are usually predictable and allow for evacuation when there are funds available LDCs that cannot afford evacuation are particular susceptible
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Slides and Avalanches This occurs when snow, mud, or debris slide down a slope of a mountain. Usually are a result of a triggering event like an earthquake or heavy rainfall Removal of vegetation also affects this.
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Tsunamis These originate in the ocean and travel to coastal areas. Usually caused by earthquakes in the ocean which creates a giant wave that reaches the coastal areas Tsunamis happen quickly LDCs do not have the ability to monitor and prepare these events.
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