Hazard risk equation
Risk = Event x Vulnerability
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Capacity to cope
Natural hazard vs disaster (events)
Hazard = potential threat to people / property
Disaster = losses experienced & harm caused (impact on community)
What’s important / needed for resilience
Vulnerability & community threshold (capacity to cope)
Types of vulnerability
Resilience definition
Factors of resilience
How well a population can recover from a disaster
How to build resilience
Scales used to measure magnitude & intensity of tectonic hazards
The Pressure and Release Model (PAR)
Used to analyse factors which cause vulnerability (inter-relationships between hazards & wider context)
Root causes
Economic, demographic and political processes which affect large populations or entire country
Dynamic pressures
Local economic or political factors that can affect a community or organisation
Due to:
Unsafe conditions
Physical conditions that affect an individual
(Kashmir)
Park model disaster response curve
Graphical representation of human responses to hazards
(More developed - less steep on deterioration, more steep on recovery & less deep)
Stages of Park model
Stage 1 - pre-disaster (modify cause & event)
Stage 2 - Relief (immediate local response - medial aid, search & rescue, appeal for foreign aid)
Stage 3 - Rehabilitation (foreign aid, modify the loss - temporary housing / services, food & water distributed)
Stage 4 - reconstruction (permanent rebuilding of physical & social infrastructure, reduce vulnerability to prevent further disasters (mitigation))
(Christchurch EQ, New Zealand)
Earth internal structure
Mantle convection
Types for plate boundaries
What occurs at constructive plate boundaries
- ridge push & slap pull
Sea-floor spreading & paleo magnetism
Paleo magnetism = study of past changes in earth magnetic field, reverses every 200,000 years
Ridge push & slab pull
Volcano primary & secondary hazards
Primary hazards:
Secondary hazards:
(Mt Nyiragorgo in republic of Congo)
Lava flows
Pyroclastic flows
Ash falls (tephra)
most ash fall locally
Lahars
Water mixed with volcanic deposits flows rapidly along existing valley
- caused by heavy rainfall from volcanic ash / volcano water vapour