Earthquake and tsunami by david b richardson geo 101
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Transcript of Earthquake and tsunami by david b richardson geo 101
Worlds Geography
Presented By. David Richardson
What is an earthquake?
In simple definition an earthquake is when an event whether it be natural or human induced causes the ground to shake.
WHY EARTHQUAKE’S OCCUR
An earthquake is like a snap of your fingers. When you first press your fingers together and sideways, friction prevents them from moving. The same thing happens with the friction along an earthquake fault line, a "crack" in the earth's crust. Pressure builds until—snap!—.
South America.
Europe
Antarctica
Africa
Asia
Australia North America
The Pacific
What are some problems?
Who is affected and what are some problems, go hand in hand.
The cost in damages are great from human lives as well as animal lives, to communities and businesses.
Solutions
1. Secure your space2. Plan to be safe (have some sort of plan
already developed, communication and such.
3. Organize disaster supplies (convenient Places)
4. Minimize Financial Hardships (Strengthen home, consider insurance)
Before During
After
1. Drop2. Cover3. Hold on
1. If not injured help those that are. Evacuate from Tsunami Zones.
2. Re-connect with your community and restore what was destroyed.
0-2 – Not felt by people
2-3 – Felt a little by people
3-4 – Ceiling lights swing
4-5 – walls crack
5-6 – Furniture moves
7-8 – Many buildings destroyed
8-up - total destruction
BIGGEST EARTH QUAKE
Chile1960May 22 approximately 11:14
AMMagnitude of 9.5!!!!!!
Killed: 1,655Injured: 3,000Homeless: 2,000,000Tsunami: 61 DeathsDamages: 75 million in Hawaii
Deaths in japan: 138Damages: 50 million
Deaths in Philippines: 32
And 500,000 worth of damages in the West coast.
Tsunami
Indonesian Tsunami
Landsat Image 40 years later. Vegetation and Soil were completely removed.
Located 7 miles from the actual source.
1720 feet tall in Lituya Bay, Alaska
Fresh water supplies may be destroyed or disrupted. Food supplies will most likely be unavailable. The potential for disease, post-traumatic stress disorder, grief, starvation, and injuries will make the post-tsunami period nearly as perilous as the tsunami itself.
Personal Issues
Solutions1. Learn about the potential danger in advance. Meaning your
home, school, and work. Where are you located. See if you area is proned for Tsunamis.
2. Prepare in advance. Assemble some type of emergency pack. (First aid kit, rain coat, some food, a radio if you can).
3. Be the smart one in your community. If it doesn’t have a community tsunami readiness training with plans of evacuation, start one!
4. Heed natural warning signs such as earthquakes, which depending on size of earthquake should be your first cause of alarm. A rapid rise and fall of coastal waters. Animal behavior changes.
5. Listen for community and government warnings.6. If you get caught in the tsunami grab for something that floats if
possible. 7. Abandon belongings. Remember Save lives, not possessions.8. If you survive, keep away until the “all clear” signals is passed.
Their can be a following of other waves after the first wave impacts.