(Natural Hazards) : Geography 312
(Natural Hazards) : Geography 312
(Natural Hazards) : Geography 312
(Natural Hazards)
Instructor:
Ian Hutchinson (RCB7226)
ph: 778-782-3232
email: ianh@sfu.ca
Term project
Course themes
Lecture schedule
The course schedule and all the Powerpoint
lecture slides are available on the web. Go to:
http://www.sfu.ca/~ianh/geog312/
Grading
Tutorial participation: 20%
Term project 30%
Midterm exam 20%
Final exam 30%*
Term project
Choose a topic (check with TA);
Keep a journal (notes, lists of
sources, etc.);
Prepare a poster in Powerpoint;
Copy the poster to a CD (along with
your journal)
The concept of natural hazards
Definition:
Events associated with normal*
geophysical and biological processes
that cause death, injury or loss of
home, property or income.
* the intensity of the hazard may be influenced by
human modifications of the landscape (e.g.
deforestation and urbanization influence flood
frequency and magnitudes) or climate (e.g. heat
waves in urban areas).
Source: Emmanuelle Bournay; UNEP/GRID-Arendal
Concept of hazard thresholds [ ]
(e.g. fatalities/damage per earthquake)
1000
Damage ($M)
10000
1000
Deaths
100
100
10
10
1 1
1 10
Earthquake magnitude
Natural Hazards
From the preceding it follows that:
Natural hazards are associated with
extreme events in the normal operation of
the planets geological, hydrological and
ecological systems.
1000
?
Deaths
100
an
?
nia
Ir
or
,
ru
li f
Pe
10
Ca
.
e.g
.
e.g
1
1 10
Earthquake magnitude
The concept of risk
Effectiveness
Time
infrastructure
Combating risk: roles
Environmental processes
Forecasting and
mitigation
Assessing individual hazards:
e.g. hurricanes in Atlantic Canada
Damage resulting from the high winds and heavy rain of Hurricane Juan
in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Sept. - Oct. 2003
Hurricane
Juan, Sept.
28, 2003. QuickTime and a
Juan was an TIFF (LZW) decompressor
are needed to see this picture.
exceptional
storm. Why did
it track directly
northward?
Hazard assessment: magnitude
Juan was
forecast to
reach Nova
Scotia as a 65-
to 70-knot
hurricane, but QuickTime and a
TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor
85 knots (a
category 2
hurricane).
Why?
QuickTime and a
TIFF (LZW) decompressor
are needed to see this picture.
High risk
blizzards and ice storms
extreme temperatures
fogs
droughts
pests and diseases
hurricanes
Low risk tsunamis
Towards a global geography of danger:
the complexity of the task
catastrophes [2005-7]
2005
QuickTime and a
TIFF (LZW) decompressor
are needed to see this picture.
2006
Earthquakes, eruptions
Storms
Droughts, wildfires QuickTime and a
Floods TIFF (LZW) decompressor
are needed to see this picture.
Americas Americas
Europe Europe
Africa Africa
Oceania Oceania
0 20 40 60 0 5 10 15
Annual number of deaths (thousands) Mortality rate / M pop
Data: EM-Dat
A geography of danger: the
known
(e.g. Indonesia [data 1907-2004])
quake
cyclone landslide drought
volcano
flood
2005/03
Tsunamis
2006/07
Source:
The Economist
(February 7, 2004)
Vulnerability assessment
Environmental processes
Mitigation and
education
Investigating personal
vulnerability: perception
London, Ontario
10
0.1
0
0
Aceh (2004) Bangladesh (1991)
New Orleans
stamina? cultural
2 behaviours? (e.g. taboos -
swimming? climbing trees?)
1.5
1 equality
However, the female
0.5 fatality rate during
Hurricane Katrina was only
0 slighter higher (4%) than
Banda Aceh AcehEast Tamil that of the male
Aceh Barat Nadu
population, and this was
Sumatra India likely a product of the
greater number of women
Data from Indian Ocean tsunami in the over-60s age group.
(2004)
Investigating economic vulnerability
Deaths from typhoons (1980-88)
4322 196
10733 1341
QuickTime and a
TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor
(Photo: Associated Press)
world
10
1
1900 1920 1940 1960 1980 2000
Structural-institutional vulnerability
(e.g. Marmara earthquake, Turkey, 1999)
400
300
200
100
0
1950s 1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s
Blessings?
nat.haz information
Your command of
Personal vulnerability?
- residence, workplace
Career path?
- community vulnerability
Empathy?
- global vulnerability
1 . 13 ..
week