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Catastrophic Events. Examples of each kind. Mount St. Helens 1980 Volcano. Mt . St. Helens erupted in the year 1980 and it was caused by an ever increasing pressure that had been accumulating within the mountain for years. The smoke column reached about 80,000 feet in less than 15 minutes. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Catastrophic Events
Examples of each kind
Mount St. Helens 1980
Volcano The smoke column reached about
80,000 feet in less than 15 minutes.
Mt. St. Helens erupted in the year 1980 and it was caused by an ever increasing pressure that had been accumulating within the mountain for years.
The eruption killed 57 people, in the lateral blast, ashfall.
Virtually no trees remained of what was once dense forest. Just beyond this area, all standing trees were blown to the ground, and at the blast's outer limit, the remaining trees were thoroughly seared.
The landslide eroded the north side of Mount St. Helens
Ash covered a lot of cities and all the are around the mountain.
250 square miles of land was damaged
There was extreme evacuation but some people refused to leave their homes at the base of the mountain
Some people refused to leave when they were told to and that caused more death.
Also some people tried to tape the eruption also causing more death
San Francisco Earthquake
destroyed nearly 500 city blocks.
Effects on Buildings:
Effects on People:
The earthquake and fires killed an estimated 3,000 people and left half of the city's 400,000 residents homeless.
Effects on Enviroment:
Though the quake lasted less than a minute, its immediate impact was disastrous.
Worst Natural Disaster in U.S HISTORY!
8.0 on richter
scale!!!!!
1906 No preparation!
Unexpected
disaster!!!!
INDONESIAN TSUNAMI 2004
155,000 fatalities,500,000 injuries, and
$10 billion in damages.
No Warning or evacuation took place.
Deadliest tsunami in recorded history.
CAUSE: A MASSIVE EARTHQUAKE IN THE INDIAN OCEAN.
Nobody saw the disaster coming.
Worst Natural disaster to ever strike Thailand.
The tsunami left a severe impact on both
the people and the land.
Wellington Avalanche
This disaster occurred on March 1, 1910 in Willington, Washington. A huge mass of snow fell from the Cascade Mountains and went down on Wellington hitting the railroad station area. The entire station along with carriages, rails, three locomotives and other debris were taken away and buried 150 feet underneath the gorge. Leaving behind 150 dead and dozens injured and severely wounded.
After
Before
96 people were killed in this avalanche.
The avalanche wrecked the Great Northern Railway, and the Willington Depot
Avalanches are formed when snow starts sliding from a mountain face, the momentum can create an avalanche. Victims of this natural disaster rarely outrun the danger, as the slabs of snow can travel up to 80 miles an hour.
This is one of the worst train disasters in U.S. history and the worst natural disaster
There were 23 survivors.
The cause of the avalanche was the rain and thunder. But, conditions had been set by the cutting of timber and by forest fires caused by steam locomotive sparks, which opened up the slopes above the tracks and created an environment for slides to occur.
There was no preparation for the avalanche, because it was unexpected
The people made the natural hazard better by rebuilding the buildings they have lost.
Hurricane Katrina
A well-defined band of storm clouds wrap around the north side of the storm's circulation center. With winds of about 40 mph (65 kph), the storm is named Tropical Storm Katrina.
Hurricane Katrina was one of the deadliest hurricanes ever to hit the United States. An estimated 1,836 people died in the hurricane and the flooding that followed in late August 2005, and millions of others were left homeless along the Gulf Coast and in New Orleans, which experienced the highest death toll.
In addition to the over 1,300 fatalities caused by Katrina over the Southeast, there were thousands of people, and as many animals, who rode out Katrina and were left without clean water, food and shelter
At least 1,500 people were killed and around $300 billion worth of damage was caused when Hurricane Katrina hit the south-eastern part of the USA. Arriving in late August 2005 with winds of up to 127 mph, the storm caused widespread flooding.
Perhaps the longest-lasting impact of Hurricane Katrina was its environmental damage that, in real terms, has mainly to do with public health. Significant amounts of industrial waste and raw sewage spilled directly into New Orleans neighborhoods. And oil spills from offshore rigs, coastal refineries, and even corner gas stations have also made their way into residential areas and business districts throughout the region
High winds from hurricanes erodes many things away a lot faster than it would have naturally
Intense flooding causes lots of weathering
The one lesson everyone should learn from Katrina is that it is essential to prepare in advance for hurricanes and other natural disasters. Hurricanes are an inevitable part of nature and will definitely happen again.
Texas Drought 2011
The drought brought
immense hardship to
farmers, ranchers, and
caused many wildfires!
The drought destroyed 1,691 homes and caused $325 million in damages!
Lack of food and drinking water for wild animalsIncreased on endangered species or even extinctionLower water levels in reservoirs, lakes, and pondsLoss of wetlandsWind and water erosion of soilsPoor soil quality
Health problems related to low water flows and poor water quality
Health problems related to dustLoss of human life
Threat to public safety from an increased number of forest and range fires
People may have to move from farms into cities, or from one city to another
Effects on people:
Effects on environment:
The drought and extreme heat are taking a toll, causing cracks in buildings!
A weather pattern where the surface temperatures are cooler in the Pacific, This turn created drier, warmer weather in the southern U.S!
Cause:
Conserve water!
How to make the hazard better:
The size and impact of the Great Flood of 1993 was unprecedented and has been considered the most costly and devastating flood to ravage the U.S. in modern history. The number of record river levels, the aerial extent, the number of persons displaced, amount of crop and property damage and its duration surpassed all earlier U.S. floods in modern times.
Details about event and effects on environment and land
Damages totaled $15 billion, 50 people died, hundreds of levees failed, and thousands of people were evacuated, some for months.
Effects on people
Causes
Transportation and industry along the Mississippi was disrupted for months. Damages to surface and river transportation in the region were the worst ever incurred in the United States.
Effects on Transportation
Preparation for safety
Involving laying sand bags.
Some days, they’d work in the hot sun building a wall in anticipation of rising waters. Other days, they’d work in pounding rain, seeing which would rise faster — the river or our wall of sandbags.
In 1993 as normal this happened - the soil was still saturated from spring rains. Normally this is followed by dry weather &has done so for the last 20 years
In 1993 Atmospheric conditions conspired to bring further torrential rains to the Mississippi Basin
Urbanisation of the Flood Plain - reducing infiltration rates etc .Poorly built non-federal levees.The development of unsuitable sites for development. The channelisation of the river - especially at St Louis.
Human Causes
A.A Jet stream swung South bringing Cool dry airB. Warm air moved North causing Thunderstorms C. Two high pressure systems developed blocking any movement of the thunderstorms. D.The rains continued throughout May, June and July.
SOUTHEASTERN TORNADOES-2011
2011 had an unusually high number of large, destructive tornado
outbreaks; 1,691 tornadoes touched down.
The major tornadoes that touched down tour through the cities and towns killing hundreds of people.
When a tornado touches down in an area, it destroys many things. Buildings around the tornado may explode because of the difference of air pressure. If the tornado runs over the building it will rip apart the building.
When tornadoes are created they tear up everything around them. Depending on how strong the wind is, tornadoes can carry almost anything. Tornadoes impact the environment by ripping apart everything and destroying many things.
A tornado can erode things by carrying for example dirt and moving it around. The wind tornadoes output can also erode things.
Preparation for a tornado: You can go into a tornado shelter or go underground away from the tornado.
Humans impact tornadoes by creating shelters that repel tornadoes, making it destroy things and redirecting the tornado. Humans have made cars, and objects that can be carried by strong winds and harm and brake humans and buildings.
Cedar fire-2003 Firestorm-2003
14 separate fires
California 2003
Burned through San Diego county
Burned down 273,246 acres
Caused by lightning strikes
A lost hiker ignited a small fire to alert rescuers
12 civilians and 20 firefighters died Greatly
impacted some of San Diego's largest watersheds
Some houses were burned down
Erosion and sedimentation increased when the fire damaged the watersheds People
immediately got away from the area of the fire and contacted the fire department
They moved firefighters and equipment away from communities that were soon in the fire's path.