Many people face dire situations everyday, but what about deadly? This is what about 43,000 Filipinos faced on October 15, 2013 when a deadly 7.2 magnitude earthquake struck the islands of Bohol and Cebu. The temblor was the largest to shake the area in 23 years. (BK Info) Also, 2211 aftershocks hit the region and most citizens were completely unprepared, and shocked. The cause of this disaster is likely the East Bohol Fault. The quake killed around 185 people and put at least 36,000 buildings (mainly homes) into a state of destruction. Various locations were now just heaps of wreckage, including ports, schools, airports, hospitals, and lots of houses. People respond to a natural catastrophe by gathering supplies, getting help, and trying to survive and get back upon their feet.…
This nuclear disaster was followed with an earthquake and a tsunami named Tõhoku at level 7. 28000 people were dead or missing, and at least 500000 people were displaced…
While people were trying to rebuild everything up, in the winter of January 23 and February 7 two huge earthquakes hit. Each of the earthquakes had a magnitude 7.5 or higher.…
7. What happened during the 1964 Good Friday Earthquake along the Alaskan shore (Copper River Delta…
Known as one of the worst disasters in the world's history, the Boxing day tsunami took place on December 26, 2004. The tsunami destroyed over 12 different countries and islands, including Sumatra, Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, and many more located by the Indian ocean. It had continued trekking countries in the Indian Ocean for over two days and left a devastating mess(Malcolm Moore and Meabh Ritchie). The only good that might have come from this terrible day in history was more knowledge about this disaster and better preparation for more to come.…
On the day of March 27, 1964 at 5:36 p.m the ground shook the lower part of Alaska that led to a destructive chain of events. The ‘1964 Great Alaska Earthquake’ was the largest earthquake ever recorded in U.S. history and ranked second in world’s most powerful recorded earthquake with a magnitude of 9.2. This earthquake lasted for about five minutes as the Pacific plate subducted under the North American plate located under Prince William Sound, Alaska. The shaking was felt estimating to about more than 1.3 million square kilometer, residence of the surrounding areas first believed that the Soviet Union has deployed a nuclear bomb on Anchorage, approximately 74.5 miles away from the epicenter. The aftershock of this large earthquake span about…
On March 11, 2011, a tragedy struck Japan that will never be forgotten. Ocean ridges and mountain ranges below the surface of the ocean caused the waves created by the 9.0 magnitude earthquake off the coast of Japan. These two factors together caused a deathly Tsunami that Japan is still struggling to recover from. The earthquake and tsunami together killed 15,840 people and set off a nuclear crisis at the Fukushima Daiichi plant. Six million households, more than 10% of the total in Japan, were without electricity. In Tokyo, rail service was suspended overnight, elevated highways were shut down and streets remained jammed as commuters who spent the night in shelters fought to get to their homes. To make matters worse, the terrifying natural disaster had sparked a human-caused crisis, as radiation leaks from crippled reactors at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. Three of the plant 's six reactors overheated and their fuel melted down causing hydrogen explosions to blow the tops off three reactor buildings, which lead to a major leak of radiation at levels not seen since Chernobyl in 1986. The authorities hugely underestimated the risks tsunamis posted to the plant. Tokyo Electric had assumed that no wave would reach more than about 20 feet, but little did they know the tsunami would hit more than twice that height. Also, the workers left at Fukushima Daiichi had not been trained to handle multiple failures, causing them to panic. A communication breakdown meant that workers at the plant had no clear sense of what was happening (Tabuchi web). Japan had been scanning for radiation exposure by medical teams because of the risk when radioactive iodine enters the body and settle in the thyroid. Children are especially vulnerable. Thousands of citizens were forced into radiation screenings before they could get help at a shelter or even return to their homes. The Japan tsunami crisis not only destroyed one of Japan’s…
Let’s play a game. Close your eyes and imagine that it’s the middle of the night and you are awaken by a loud roar coming beneath your feet. As you stumble downstairs you cover your head from objects falling from bedroom walls, kitchen cabinets, and bookshelves as you shout to your love ones to go outside. You head to the closet to get your emergency bag filled with two flashlights, three water bottles and six protein bars. As your about to exit the building it all stops just to be repeated a few nights later. Now open your eyes imagine this. Imagine that this is not make believe but the reality residents of Oklahoma face constantly due to the sudden increase in earthquake activity. Oklahoma has recently had an increase in the number of earthquakes they have each year from magnitudes ranging from .05 to 3.4 and above. There were three earthquakes on February seven 2016, thirty-two in the past seven days, one hundred and seventy in the past month and three thousand three hundred and ninety six in the past month according to the Earthquake tracker. The state urges residence to have an earthquake preparedness plan due to the constant increase and magnitude of the earthquakes.…
My world changed. The 6.7 earthquake which crippled the Northridge area on January 17, 1994 rattled and ripped apart the fibers of security in our neighborhood. Our home was ruined; smashed glass, crumbled walls, and the lack of electricity, gas, and water made it uninhabitable. Without basic utilities, we slept and "lived" in our car for nine days while guarding our home from looters.…
The first example to be used is that of Hurricane Katrina which devastated the city of New Orleans on 29th August 2005.This catastrophe left over one thousand dead and left thousands homeless, without drinking water, food or sanitation. Prior to the…
Recently, many crises have occurred and it is difficult to choose among them but I will focus on…
that state of homelessness. The Earthquake in Haiti, or the Tsunami In South East Asia,…
One of the many problems that the world has recently had to face was Hurricane Katrina. In this devastating storm, “nearly 1000 people perished, and hundreds of thousands were left homeless” (O'Neill, 2005). Not to mention “the financial cost [that] may top $100 billion” (O'Neill, 2005). The area that we mainly affected was Louisiana in the United States. This is where the hurricane caused the most damage and destruction. The major event was of course the actual hurricane, but there were other effects that lasted over a very long extensive period of time and still continue to affect people today…
On March 11th 2011, Japan suffered a 9.0 magnitude earthquake off its northern coast, followed by an enormous tsunami which took the lives of around 20,000 people. An earthquake of this magnitude had never been experienced in the history of mankind, and came as a shock to many seismologists. With the title of being the most earthquake prepared country in the world, Japan was thought to be properly armed against any quake that came its way. Mitigation efforts are the most technological of anywhere in the world, and ensuring people are prepared for such events has been an important task since the last devastating earthquake in 1995 in the city of Kobe. These efforts include building codes, early warning systems, coastline defences and various others. Even after a year, Japan is still reeling from this event, and one wonders if they will ever bounce back from such a blow to their landscape, their people, and their economy. The questions to be asked then are why did so many people perish in this disaster (even with the most advanced warning systems), and what can Japan do to revitalize itself with regards to physical, cultural, and economical adaptations?…
It is the 31 December of 2004. We are heading for a new year with new expectations,opportunities and goals. However we have experienced a Tsunami that just very recently struck Thailand. This has left some traces and marks. How has this natural disaster really affected the human beings? I am about to find out.…