Hazards

Descripción

Year 13 (Hazards and Risk Management) Geography Fichas sobre Hazards , creado por Alyssa Hulme el 27/08/2017.
Alyssa Hulme
Fichas por Alyssa Hulme, actualizado hace más de 1 año
Alyssa Hulme
Creado por Alyssa Hulme hace más de 7 años
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Resumen del Recurso

Pregunta Respuesta
Define Hazard A threat (physical or human induced) that has the potential to cause loss of life, injury, property damage, socioeconomic disruption or environmental degradation.
Define Disaster A sudden calamitous event causing serious disruption of the functioning of a community or society causing widespread human material economic/environmental losses exceeding the communities ability to handle it.
Name one or more of the requirements needed to be entered into the database of the UN's International Strategy for Disaster Reduction 1. A report of 10 or more killed 2. A report of 100 people affected 3. A declaration of a state emergency 4. A request by the national government for international assistance
Examples of Human Induced/ Technological Hazards - Oil spills in marine environment - Soil contamination - Release of chemicals into water (groundwater, rivers etc)
What is a hurricane? A tropical storm/hurricane is a large LOW PRESSURE system characterized by high winds and heavy rain. Must exceed 119 km/h
When was Hurricane Katrina? 2005
Where did Hurricane Katrina occur and is it a MEDC or LEDC country? Gulf of Mexico where it affected Carribbean and United States (MEDC 's) i.e New Orleans, Cuba, Louisiana, Bahamas
What are some factors that determine the amount of damage caused by tropical storms? - Populated or non-populated areas - Development of country - Warning given to residents and preparedness of residents - Existing conditions - Timing of landfall (high/low tide)
What are the three approaches to living in hazardous areas? 1. Fatalistic - Optimistic Approach 2. Acceptance - Advantages outweigh risks 3. Adaptation - Know the risks/hazards and people prepare for them, and therefore survive
Vulnerability of Haiti after earthquake? - Food is scarce/stealing of distributed food - Women having babies on street, therefore lack of healthcare - Police have to keep order - Those living in particularly poor suburbs
Factors that make a population vulnerable - Demographic factors i.e Size of Population/Density - Socio Economic i.e Level of development/individual wealth - Preparedness i.e Public education, recent hazardous events, warning systems - Ability to deal with hazard i.e Governance, effective lines of communication, insurance etc
Compare one factor of vulnerability of Hurricane Katrina vs Hurricane Nargis Myanmar GDP - PPP $1817 with population of 48 724 400 USA GDP - PPP $43 480 with population of 315 791 300 USA Better financially equipped to deal with repercussions of disasters
Horn of Africa vs Australia Drought Vulnerability Horn of Africa : - Caught in deadly cycle of death and famine - Average family size 6-7 - Youthful populations - High infant mortality - Health expenditure 4.9% of GDP Australia : - 4.26 Infant mortality rate - Higher healthcare expenditure - MEDC
When it comes to disaster response what are the 3 R's? 1. Rescue (Short term - hours and days) 2. Rehabilitation (Medium term - days to weeks) 3. Reconstruction (Long term - weeks to years)
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