#Tsunami Preparedness
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westvalleyfaultph · 4 months ago
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New Disaster Preparedness Tool in Ilokano Empowers Local Communities
A groundbreaking disaster preparedness tool in Ilokano has been launched, transforming how local communities access and understand crucial geohazard information. The DANAS Project, or Disaster Narratives for Experiential Knowledge-based Science Communication, was unveiled on January 14 through a collaboration between the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (Phivolcs), Don Mariano…
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thechurchoftheatom · 5 months ago
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Photo Credit: Photo by Jyo81, licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0. Source: Wikimedia Commons.
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10bmnews · 29 days ago
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1,000-foot Tsunami warning! Cascadia megaquake could wipe parts of America off the map | - The Times of India
1000 foot Tsunami warning A newly published study from scientists at Virginia Tech has revealed a sobering scenario that could unfold across the Pacific Northwest. According to their findings, coastal regions in Northern California, Oregon, and Washington face a significant threat of catastrophic flooding and mega-tsunamis—potentially reaching up to 1,000 feet high—due to the combined forces of…
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rightnewshindi · 3 months ago
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जापान के क्यूशू में 6.0 तीव्रता का भूकंप: लोग दहशत में, सुनामी का खतरा टला
Japan Kyushu Earthquake: जापान के क्यूशू द्वीप पर मंगलवार रात अचानक भूकंप के तेज झटके महसूस किए गए, जिसने स्थानीय लोगों को डरा दिया। नेशनल सेंटर फॉर सीस्मोलॉजी (NCS) के अनुसार, यह भूकंप 2 अप्रैल 2025 को भारतीय समयानुसार शाम 7:34 बजे आया और इसकी तीव्रता रिक्टर स्केल पर 6.0 मापी गई। भूकंप का केंद्र क्यूशू के दक्षिणी हिस्से में था, जहां कई सेकंड तक कंपन महसूस हुआ। हालांकि, राहत की बात यह है कि अब तक…
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tornadoquest · 6 months ago
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Tornado Quest Top Science Links For December 21 - 28, 2024 #science #weather #climate #climatechange #tornado #winter
Greetings to all and happy holidays to everyone! I’m glad you stopped by. I hope your holiday season is full of love, gratitude, and anticipation of the new year. This week, we’ll revisit our look at 2024’s tornado activity, winter weather safety information, this week’s US Drought Monitor update, along with some interesting reads. Let’s get started. Tornado Quest micro podcast for December 21 –…
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awomanfirstpoems · 1 year ago
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Of clever architects and disaster resilience buildings
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toya-matsuzawa · 2 years ago
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10.津波から7年後の釜石でサマースクール/Summer school in Kamaishi seven years after the tsunami
2018年の8月。私は初めて被災地の地を踏んだ。東北に行くのもこれが初めてだった。乗り慣れない新幹線で北へ向かい、鈍行列車でひたすら三陸海岸の方へ。目的地は鉄の街、釜石だった。 きっかけは大学の職員さんからのちょっとした声掛けから始まった。「イギリスのNGOが釜石でサマースクールを開くんだけど、通訳ボランティアとして参加できない?」というものだった。私は特に予定もないし、行ってみるか、という軽い気持ちで釜石に行くことにした。 内容は高校生向けのサマースクールを、アトランティックパシフィックというイギリスを拠点にしている団体が開くので、通訳として大学生スタッフが何名か欲しいとのことだった。具体的にどんな内容なのかはよくわかっていなかったが、なんとなく面白そう、そいうえば被災地って言われる場所に行ったことないな、という結構粗末な気持ちで参加を決めた。まだこの時は気づいていなかったが、釜石…
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lesbianrobin · 11 months ago
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ok literally i believe that during quarantine buck was like eddie let's start a podcast and eddie was like what would we talk about and buck was like we could tell people about natural disasters and teach emergency preparedness!! and eddie was like (knowing full well nobody on earth is just gonna stumble upon their random podcast and start listening) okay <3 because he just wants to have fun listening to his best guy yap. they record a two and a half hour long episode about tsunamis to start with and then they do one about earthquakes and landslides etc etc and they're all long as fuck and it's 80% buck talking with eddie just cutting in occasionally to ask him questions or make little jokes.
they make like seven episodes before buck starts running out of ideas that fall under natural disaster and emergency preparedness so he kinda loses interest and forgets about it but those seven episodes are still up on spotify and eddie has them downloaded and he listens to them all the time. sometimes when he can't fall asleep he'll turn on their podcast on low volume and let buck's voice soothe him to sleep. and he never tells buck about this but not because he's actively hiding it just because it doesn't register to him as anything of note. he's like well of course i listen to our podcast to fall asleep the familiarity is soothing. duh.
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reasonsforhope · 1 year ago
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Since the 1960s, the world has seen a spike in the number of natural disasters, largely due to rising sea levels and an ever gradually increasing global surface temperature.
The good news? We’re getting better at helping each other when disasters strike.
According to a recent study from Our World In Data, the global toll from natural disasters has dramatically dropped in the last century.
“Low-frequency, high-impact events such as earthquakes and tsunamis are not preventable, but such high losses of human life are,” wrote lead authors Hannah Ritchie and Pablo Rosado.
To conduct their research, Ritchie and Rosado gathered data from all geophysical, meteorological, and climate-related disasters since 1900. That includes earthquakes, volcanic activity, landslides, drought, wildfires, severe storms, and mass floods. 
In the early-to-mid 20th century, the average annual death toll from disasters was very high, often climbing to over a million. 
For example, the study cites that in 1931, 2.7 million people died from the Yangtze–Huai River floods. In 1943, 1.9 million died from the Bangladeshi famine of 1943. Even low-frequency events had extreme death tolls. 
“In recent decades we have seen a substantial decline in deaths,” Ritchie and Rosado observed. “Even in peak years with high-impact events, the death toll has not exceeded 500,000 since the mid-1960s.”
Why has the global death toll from disasters dropped? 
There are a number of factors at play in the improvement of disaster aid, but the leading component is that human beings are getting better at predicting and preparing for natural disasters. 
“We know from historical data that the world has seen a significant reduction in disaster deaths through earlier prediction, more resilient infrastructure, emergency preparedness, and response systems,” Ritchie and Rosado explained in their study. 
On April 6, [2024],a 7.2 magnitude earthquake rocked the city of Hualien in Taiwan. Days later, as search and rescue continues, the death toll currently rests at 16. 
Experts have praised Taiwan for their speedy response and recovery, and attributed the low death toll to the measures that Taiwan implemented after an earthquake of similar strength hit the city 25 years earlier. Sadly, on that day in 1999, 2,400 people died and 11,000 were injured. 
In an interview with Al Jazeera, Wang Yu — assistant professor at National Taiwan University — said that event, known as the Chi-Chi earthquake, revolutionized the way Taiwan approached natural disasters. 
“There were lots of lessons we learned, including the improvement of building codes, understanding earthquake warning signs, the development and implementation of earthquake early warning (EEW) systems and earthquake education,” said Wang. 
Those same sensors and monitoring systems allowed authorities to create “shakemaps” during Hualien’s latest earthquake, which helped them direct rescue teams to the regions that were hit the hardest. 
This, in conjunction with stronger building codes, regular earthquake drills, and public education campaigns, played a huge role in reducing the number of deaths from the event. 
And Taiwan’s safeguards on April 6 are just one example of recent measures against disasters. Similar models in strengthening prediction, preparedness, and recovery time have been employed around the world when it comes to rescuing victims of floods, wildfires, tornados, and so on. 
What else can we learn from this study?
When concluding the findings from their study, Ritchie and Rosado emphasized the importance of increasing safety measures for everyone.
Currently, there is still a divide between populations with high gross national income and populations living in extreme poverty.
Even low-income countries that infrequently have natural disasters have a much higher death rate  because they are vulnerable to collapse, displacement, and disrepair. 
“Those at low incomes are often the most vulnerable to disaster events; improving living standards, infrastructure, and response systems in these regions will be key to preventing deaths from natural disasters in the coming decades,” surmised Ritchie and Rosado.
“Overall development, poverty alleviation, and knowledge-sharing of how to increase resilience to natural disasters will therefore be key to reducing the toll of disasters in the decades to come."
-via GoodGoodGood, April 11, 2024
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alchemistc · 1 year ago
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fascination with your presentation | bucktommy 1/1
read on ao3
Tommy likes to touch things. It's just a random quirk of his that Eddie's noticed - a hand sliding along the back of the couch as he follows Eddie into the kitchen to grab a beer, fingers balancing along the table as he leans, elbow pressing into the frame of the doorway like he's gauging the space between walls.
He's tactile - a smack to the space between his shoulders, fist bumps and high fives and teasing hair ruffles when he's got Eddie pinned in the middle of a spar and they both know Eddie isn't getting out of it.
It's nice. There aren't a lot of men, especially with their background, in their line of work, who are remotely comfortable expressing affection like that.
He's a fan.
Christopher is less so, when Tommy lays a big hand to the crown of his head and goes for a noogie. He huffs, rolls his eyes, rolls his head forward and away from the touch, makes some noise about a call he's supposed to make later that night and how he doesn't want his hair messed up for it, and Tommy holds his hands up in apology, fighting a grin as Chris smooths his hair back down.
Eddie's used to it already, so it takes him a second to really notice Tommy rounding the edge of the table to flick through papers and pictures and receipts tacked to the fridge as he digs through one of his drawers in search of the bottle opener he knows he has stashed in here somewhere. Eddie's more of a twist cap beer guy, but Tommy's oddly flavored fancy bottles always need an opener.
"Here," Tommy says, and Eddie turns just in time to catch the keys Tommy slings at him.
"I don't like your truck that much," Eddie tells him, which is a lie.
Tommy tips his head forward to indicate the keys. "Bottle opener, Diaz."
Which makes sense. He should get one for himself, actually. It's a little shocking neither one of them carries a utility knife on them. The preparedness rules maybe didn't stick after discharge as well as they could have
Tommy's gaze drifts, and Eddie watches his head tilt, ring and middle finger reaching up to tap at one of the pictures on the fridge. Chris and Buck, a few years back, some trip to the museum during either Buck or Chris' dinosaur phase. Buck's holding a giant stuffed pteranodon ("Pterodactyls were smaller and had cone-shaped teeth and backward-projecting crests, actually, and this isn't technically the most accurate depiction anyway, it's generally accepted they probably had feathers, now." -- So, definitely Buck's phase, now that he's remembering.) and Chris has a specific brand of smile across his face that Eddie has quietly dubbed his Buck-smile. Something around the edges of his eyes that's always just a little brighter for Buck.
"Cute picture," Tommy says, and Chris's eyes draw to it as Tommy taps his knuckles once-twice to it before dropping his hand to his side.
It's not the first time someone in this circle of three has brought up Buck.
The first night Tommy'd been here, camped out on the couch watching a game, Chris had had a million questions, and Buck had come up pretty naturally over the course of them comparing disasters they'd been a part of, or worked.
Chris had brought up the tsunami, which had led to a back and forth where they discovered Tommy had likely flown right over them at least once during that disaster of a day, and then it had evolved into Chris memorializing all of Buck's greatest (most traumatizing) hits - pinned under a fire engine, climbing a crane tower in the middle of a county wide panic about a shooter targeting firefighters (he doesn't bring up Eddie being shot, which - maybe they should revisit that at some point, make sure Chris isn't burying that), Buck getting struck by lightning, Buck taking charge in the bridge collapse.
And obviously, if Chris was gonna debate Star Wars, he was gonna bring up Buck's involved opinions on Machete order and OG vs Prequels vs the Somehow Palpatine Returned era, and be delighted that Tommy's opinion differed from Buck's, because that made Chris the victor in that ongoing battle.
Buck is a big part of Chris and Eddie's lives, so he's gonna be dropped into conversation. Nothing strange about that.
Tommy always calls him Evan, which is a big old dose of whiplash every time, and he can't think why he does that, because despite Buck introducing himself (weirdly) as Buh-Evan Buckley, they've seen each other since, and no one else Tommy talks to calls him Evan, so he doesn't know why Buck hasn't corrected him.
Chris' mouth does something strange as Tommy keeps looking at the picture, his expression going a little curious in a way Eddie can't quite parse, and then he's grinning. There's no reason to be suspicious, except for the way he actually puts down his phone to engage with Tommy as Eddie passes a beer off.
"Yeah, Buck always takes me to exhibits every time there's a new one. He's cool like that."
Tommy hums around his first sip, expression placid, posture relaxed. "Maybe I could take you to the next one."
Christopher's eyes narrow.
Eddie's lost.
"Uh, not without Buck. Carla took me once without him and he pretended to be fine about it for weeks until I asked him to take me again. He was not happy we went without him. But you could come with us."
Tommy tap-tap-taps his finger against the rim of his bottle, unfazed by the slightly territorial way Chris had phrased it. Eddie's fazed. Eddie is not sure there's not a second layer to this conversation he's missing. "I'll look it up. Jot it down in my day book."
Christopher is too young to have a clue what that means, but he doesn't seem to be quite done with whatever the hell it is he's got going on right now. "Good," he says. "Buck's single right now, so he's got a lot of extra time for stuff."
Tommy's gaze flits to Christopher's, and Eddie doesn't have a fucking clue what's going on, but it's a weighted look for half a second before Chris' gaze turns back to his phone.
"You have his number, right? Maybe you should call him and figure out a day we can all go."
Something happens around the corners of Tommy's mouth that he hides by tipping the bottle mouth against his lips again. "Yeah. I've got his number."
For a second Eddie wonders why, before he remembers catching Buck down at Harbor before the fight. When had Buck gotten his number?
"Cool," says Chris, eyes already glued back to his phone. "We usually get lunch first. Buck really likes pizza."
"Everyone likes pizza," Tommy says, eyes glimmering with mirth that Eddie absolutely does not know the source of.
"Yeah, but Buck's picky about it. He says there's a perfect pizza to crust ratio that most places don't get right. Also he likes it when they have a stone oven, and the little pizza risers."
Tommy rolls his tongue over his teeth. And - why is Eddie watching this interaction so carefully? It's not like he's worried Tommy's gonna say something weird to his kid, even if his kid is being weird.
"I'm gonna go throw the game on. You hungry?"
Tommy's eyes shift to meet his, and Eddie feels that same frisson of excitement he gets sometimes when Buck is paying close attention to him. "I could eat. Not pizza though. There's nowhere around here with a good stone oven."
"Dad likes pineapple on his pizza, his pizza opinions suck."
Eddie tosses his hands up. This is an old argument, one created entirely by Buck because Chris hadn't minded a good Canadian pizza before Buck declared war on them. "Pizza's just pizza. I was thinking Chinese, anyway."
"Can we get those spring rolls Buck always gets?"
Tommy's gaze slips to the fridge one more time, eyes drifting across the picture he'd pointed out earlier, before he unclips the menu for the Chinese place down the street from its spot half-covering the calendar to hand it off to Eddie. He spots the circle around their plans for Thursday and reaches out to touch the date.
"You invite anyone else for Thursday?"
Eddie rolls his top lip over his bottom one. "Buck hates basketball, turns me down every time I ask. I might ask Chim, though, he and his brother always liked to play."
Literally nothing in Tommy's expression changes, but Eddie feels like he's reacting to something in that sentence anyway. He's trying to figure out how to cut the weird tension in the room when Christopher starts listing off his order, and he's so distracted by trying to get a list prepared to call that he misses two thirds of Chris and Tommy's continued conversation, which is somehow, for some reason, still about Buck. Geez, is Chris pissed that Eddie's got a new friend? He should invite Buck next time he makes plans to hang out at home with Tommy.
----
"It was a date," Buck tells him, a week and a half later, while Eddie's staring at his phone like looking hard enough might make it, and his relationship with Marisol, maybe disappear. Just for a little while, while he squares things up with God.
Eddie tosses his phone, turns to look at Buck in the second before it computes, manages to pull back just enough so that it's not a full, ridiculous double take.
"When you and Marisol ran into me and Tommy, we were on a date."
"Really?" Buck usually tells him the second he's interested in someone, because for some reason he thinks Eddie has any idea how to have a loving, lasting relationship, even though Eddie's been lobbing live grenades straight at love since he was fourteen. He hadn't said a word to Eddie about -
Well.
Well actually --
Well shit.
Oh, he's definitely giving Tommy and Christopher both shit about this later.
"Wait, Tommy's gay?"
A whole host of things are suddenly lining up -- Buck at Harbor the afternoon before the fight, and Buck asking half a million questions after the fight, and Buck and Tommy both picking at the thread of Christopher's praises for the other, and -- Buck had been jealous. Buck had been jealous of Eddie spending time with Tommy. Buck had shoulder checked him to the court and sprained his ankle because he liked the guy enough to lose his head about it.
Oh, he's gonna hold this over all of their heads for sure.
Which for the moment is apparently not that great an idea because Tommy'd pressed pause after one date, which is fast even for Buck. He tells him so.
"When we ran into you guys I kinda made an idiot of myself and he said he doesn't think I'm ready." Buck looks -- sad. Disappointed. Nervous, hands rubbing at his thighs like he's soothing himself. It's a fair point, on Tommy's part, even if he doesn't know all the details.
(Something about hot chicks pings in the back of his mind, but he shelves it for later.)
Buck's never really hinted at romantic inclinations in that direction, although some of his comments about good looking guys are making a little more sense, in retrospect.
"What do you think?" Eddie's pretty sure he knows the answer to this question, but he asks anyway, because Buck likes to work these things out. He likes to talk about them. Eddie imagines not being able to articulate exactly what he was feeling without wondering if his friends would think it was weird probably (definitely) contributed to his wildly dramatic behavior the last few weeks.
Geez, Tia Pepa would be eating this telenovela shit up.
"I kinda can't stop thinking about him," Buck tells him, and it's a voice Eddie's not entirely sure he's ever heard from Buck before -- at least when he's talking about someone he's into. Buck's always got a checklist and a trillion rationalizations. Now he just sounds... smitten.
And Tommy is too, Eddie thinks. He is absolutely gonna call him out for pumping his kid for information. Maybe accuse him of only befriending him to get to Buck -- see if he can make the unflappable Tommy Kinard flap, a little.
"You should call him," Eddie tells him, already imagining double dates with a partner of Buck's he doesn't hope will spontaneously combust in the middle of dinner. Maybe between Tommy, Chris and Eddie they can finally convince Buck to go to one of the car shows he's always rolling his eyes at. Maybe Tommy and his terribly hidden romantic side can actually match Buck's crazy.
Eddie hugs Buck on his way out the door and feels the tension drain from his shoulders.
Maybe touched starved Buck will get to enjoy that little tactile quirk of Tommy's, too.
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joy-haver · 9 months ago
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Let’s talk a little bit about hurricanes!
Let’s discuss where the danger lies, individual preparedness, community preparedness, and mutual aid efforts around these storms and their aftermaths.
To start, the thing to remember about hurricanes is this: It’s not one disaster. It’s hundreds of different disasters at once.
Hurricanes have their own massive winds. They also spawn tornadoes. Hurricanes bring storm surges like tsunamis, but they also bring heavy rains, swelled rivers, broken dams. The vectors for flooding are multitudinous.
With any disaster, the danger isn’t always direct. While many people die die in the immediate storm, often the deaths continue to accumulate for months after. This is because people don’t just go on living just because the storm is over. All of us have lives that are dependent on infrastructure. Medical infrastructure, food infrastructure, social infrastructure, transportation infrastructure, electrical infrastructure. When any of these fails it can put strain on the rest. People go hungry, go lonely, their disabilities go untreated, injuries are more likely in the wreckage, they die of infection and disease and suicide because it seems so hopeless. So many become homeless, displaced, losing everything. And often there is nothing in the way of aid.
And bigotry can often exacerbate. white supremacist groups and police become vigilantes, killing those who scavenge the wreckage. Even in milder hurricanes, police violence and violence from store proprietors increases. Disabled people are often pushed out of hospitals to die at home. People are euthanized.
Hurricanes exacerbate the worst parts of the system of domination.
But they also bring out the best in communities and people who believe in caring for one another.
After every hurricane, tens of thousands of volunteers go out in their airboats to save people from the floods. People prepare food, develop water filtration. People open their homes to those who have fled, those who often have lost everything. These volunteer armies of aid workers are from all accross the south east, from many paths of life and from every conceivable part of the political spectrum. On the flat boats of the Cajun Navy, in their supply lines, you will see maga hats standing next to anarchist abolitionists, both concerned primarily with how they will get an old woman both just met her medicine. Months and years after the storm you will see flocks of children flittering like bees around stripped down homes, helping to remove what is tainted and rebuild towards home again, and they will be working aside those same people who helped in the immediate aftermath.
Even when government aid does come in, it is not the government that manages all of it. They pass off many of the resources the mutual aid organizations for distribution.
The environmental cleanup, the saving, the feeding, the rebuilding; the vast majority of the work is done by everyday people. That can include you.
So, What Do We Do?
1. Individual and household preparedness.
The biggest step is preparedness. A pound of cure is nice, but it is better served with an ounce of prevention.
Individual Preparedness begins with risk evaluation.
Ask yourself these questions;
-what is the likelihood of my home flooding? Has it flooded before? How much could it flood if it did? Do I have sand bags or flood walls to prevent minor floodwaters? Do I have roof access in high floodwaters?
-what is my evacuation plan? Do I have friends in a safer area (away from coasts, outside of a flood plane)? Do I have transportation to their? If not, how can I find other people that do?
-how long can I live without power? Do I have life saving medical equipment that needs power? If so, who do I know with a generator?
-how much water do I have stored? What vessels around my house can hold water? (Remember, you can always use less than drinkable water to flush toilets).
-how much non perishable food do I have stored? How would I cook it without electricity? How much cooking fuel do I have access to? How would I continue to cook and wash dishes if I had limited access to water?
-What would keep me going if I lost everything I own? What motivations to live and keep going could I hold onto?
-do I have home insurance? Do I have pictures of the things inside my house stored on the could or a third party location incase I need to make a claim?
-where are my important documents stored? Are they safe incase of a flood, or the house falling down?
-how acclimated am I to the heat? Have I been spending enough time outside? Will a loss of air conditioning make me unable to function? Do I have a plan to get cool if that happens?
2. Community preparedness
Of course, individual preparedness is not enough, nor is it the most efficient. Survival and rebuilding comes from communities working together. So how do we do that?
Let’s talk a bit about skills you can have, and skills you can look for in your community, that might come in handy in a hurricane or post hurricane disaster.
-airboat and pirogue navigation! This is how you save lives. Flat bottom boats you can get people into.
-food storage and preservation. Networking with folks who doing canning, save beans, store large amounts of rice, gather nuts, dehydrate greens and fruits. These folks will often provide much of the food before outside aid arrives, and after it dries up.
-outdoor cooking!
-water purification. This is huge. Clean water is the hardest thing to come by. Having water purification tablets and devices, or knowing how to make your own, can save hundreds of peoples lives.
-cautious eyes. Everyone needs help spotting downed power lines in these environments.
-ham radio enthusiasts. These folks can be the lifeblood of rescue operations, resource distribution, and medical assistance. This is probably the most under utilized skill in disaster response and management
-construction. This is huge. Rebuilding requires many many volunteers. The wonderful thing tho, is you can just show up and learn most of the time.
- cleaning. Mold is a huge problem post hurricane.
-first aid!!!!
-physical strength. Many frail old people need to be carried out.
-a strong sense that flood water is dangerous. This might not seem like a skill. It is. Being willing to instill this sense of fear and respect in others will save lives.
-networking. This is huuuge. Somone has to connect all the rednecks and Cajuns and gays and aid organizations and churches and restaurants and whatever else. None of this works without relationships. Knowing people, building trust ahead of time. Being the person they come to with their resources.
-grant writing. Get that government money into the community.
3. Resource evaluation
Skills to offer your community are very important, but that’s not all we have. We have access to other resources, and if we leverage those right, those too can save lives.
Community preparedness begins with resource evaluation, and needs evaluation.
Here are some resources you might have, and how you can use them.
-a safe home, high off of flood zones. You can be an evacuation destination.
-a generator. You can be the place with power that people flee to to save their medications, or to use medical equipment, or simply to keep from having a heat stroke
-a large pot and propane burner. You can be the person who cooks for masses of displaced people. Or you can let someone else use it and cook.
-flat bottom boats. You can save people, or let others use them to.
-construction equipment and supplies. You can bring these in after a disaster to help.
-access to large buildings with generators. If you are the janitor at the stadium, you can open the gates to that high ground. If you are the secretary of the church, you can unlock the doors of shelter.
-contacts with people in nearby cities who have been through this before, and have their own resources. Hurricanes are terrible, but they don’t hit the whole south at once. We can take turns saving each other
- a pool full of water people can use to flush toilets.
- storage of food.
-space others can store any items listed
-access to lots of sunscreen, insect repellents, and mosquito nets
-access to soap, detergent, toothbrushes, toothpastes, menstrual products, and deodorant. Specifically go for free and clear soaps, dial gold, and dawn. They all have different applications.
-an excess of phone chargers. Phones are lifelines. They are one of the most important things you can have.
-an excess of medicines. Rationing and saving prescriptions might save your life or others.
-first aid equipment
4. need’s assessment.
All of this is great, but to make best use of it, it’s best to know ahead of time where resources will be needed, and who might need the most help.
Begin learning this by focusing on these things.
-do you know the people who live around you? Do you know who’s old and alone, and might need to be checked on in a storm? Do you know who is disabled? Do you know who lives at the bottom of your hill by the flooding creek, and who lives at the top where it’s safest? These questions can save lives!
-do you know who might need help evacuating? If you plan to evacuate, do they know you could take them with you?
-do you know who needs access to generators for life saving equipment?
-do you know who is too poor to afford to be prepared?
-do you know who might need help putting sand bags around their home?
-do you know which mutual aid and charity organizations might need help connecting to local communities?
Thank you for reading!
Stay safe out there, and help as often as you can, while still keeping yourself stable enough to help again later. Right now many homes are flooded in Florida, power is out in Georgia, and a dam broke near Asheville.
Volunteer : https://stability.org/default.aspx
Donate : https://nonprofit.resilia.com/donate/
https://nonprofit.resilia.com/donate/
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westvalleyfaultph · 5 months ago
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Pangasinan Strengthens Tsunami and Earthquake Preparedness Amid Manila Trench Movement
The provincial government of Pangasinan has ramped up its efforts to prepare residents for potential tsunami and earthquake hazards, driven by increased seismic activity along the Manila Trench. This proactive approach highlights the importance of disaster preparedness in safeguarding the lives and properties of its coastal communities. Project PARAAN: A Comprehensive Preparedness Initiative At…
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adastra-sf · 5 months ago
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Russian & North Korean Underwater "Radioactive Tsunami" Drones
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image from full story at Popular Mechanics: X
Russia and North Korea have both developed underwater uncrewed vehicles (UUVs) designed to carry nuclear warheads capable of generating catastrophic waves of radioactive water, threatening coastal cities and entire regions - called “radioactive tsunamis” by the Korean Central News Agency.
This significant and challenging threat is all the more dangerous because of a growing military collaboration called “Joint Sword,” including North Korea, Russia, Iran, China, and others. Russia and North Korea have officially signed a defense treaty, codifying their relationship.
Putin was first to publicly showcase such a weapon, described as a “doomsday device.” Russia’s Poseidon nuclear-powered torpedo is capable of creating destructive, radioactive waves that could wipe out entire coastal populations and infrastructures.
Concerns among global military strategists are sharp when it comes to Joint Sword’s uniquely capable UUVs.
The primary advantage of these weapons is their potential to launch surprise attacks on unsuspecting nations. Both Russia’s Poseidon and North Korea’s Haeil could, if deployed, create massive radioactive waves, not just inflicting devastating damage on coastal regions but also spreading fear and chaos through misinformation online, to which we are susceptible due to increasingly unreliable content on social media.
Perhaps most concerning is the West’s apparent lack of preparedness for these radioactive tsunami weapons - there is no indication that the US Navy has developed countermeasures designed to protect against such threats or to emulate their abilities. No US officials have so much as acknowledged the phrase “radioactive tsunami” as something they're aware of or addressing in any real way.
The stealth and unpredictability of these weapons is changing the dynamics of the world's growing conflicts, making military attacks more unpredictable and harder to defend against. Experts emphasize that such weapons will have severe psychological and other impacts, particularly if targeting major cities like New York, Los Angeles, or Tokyo, which lie along vulnerable coastlines.
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10bmnews · 1 month ago
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Tsunami warnings! Scientists reveal Tsunami threats in US states due to climate change and geology | - The Times of India
Most tsunamis are terrifying, but mega tsunamis are on a whole different scale. These colossal waves can reach unimaginable heights, sometimes over 1,000 feet, and race inland with little to no warning. The triggers? Massive geological events like landslides, volcanic collapses, or powerful earthquakes. Now, as climate change accelerates glacial melt and destabilizes landscapes, the risks are…
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rushilsood · 11 months ago
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Your Name is a film that goes beyond cultural and geographical boundaries, connecting with audiences everywhere. The story follows two teenagers, Taki and Mitsuha, who mysteriously swap bodies. This magical premise dives deep into themes of identity, connection, and the blend of personal and societal issues.
The film tackles several important issues within Japan and globally. One major theme is the rural-urban divide. Mitsuha’s life in a small, traditional town is starkly different from Taki’s fast-paced Tokyo life. This contrast reflects the ongoing struggles many Japanese towns face due to urban migration, leading to depopulation and cultural loss. Globally, it mirrors the challenges of preserving cultural heritage amidst rapid modernization. Another significant issue is disaster preparedness. The comet disaster in Your Name is reminiscent of real-life events like the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami. It highlights the importance of memory and collective effort in overcoming such tragedies, a theme that resonates worldwide in an era of increasing natural disasters.
On a personal level, the film brings up feelings of nostalgia and a longing for connections that go beyond time and space. The idea of swapping bodies and lives, even temporarily, makes you think about the nature of empathy and understanding. It made me reflect on the everyday challenges and joys that others experience, deepening my appreciation for diverse perspectives.
Michel Foucault’s “The History of Sexuality” offers a unique way to analyze Your Name. Foucault’s method emphasizes the historical and social construction of identities and the power dynamics involved. In Your Name, the body-swapping can be seen as a metaphor for the fluidity of identity and how personal and social histories shape our experiences. The characters’ struggles with their new identities reflect Foucault’s idea that identity is not fixed but is continuously constructed through discourse and power relations.
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historyandarthijinks · 1 year ago
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Real Life Heroes (1): Tilly Smith
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A 10 year old girl at the time of 2004, Tilly Smith would happen to save the lives of over 100 people while on vacation with her family.
Tilly Smith is British woman from the village of Oxshott in Surrey, England. In 2004 her family went on vacation in Thailand, where they would spend an evening on Mai Khao Beach. Unknown to the approximately 100 beachgoers, and Tilly's family, the 2004 Indian Ocean Earthquake had just occurred 150 miles (240km) from the coast of Sumatra Island, Indonesia.
The 2004 Indian Ocean Earthquake affected 18 different countries primarily, not including the thousands of tourists caught in the disaster.
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Including...
India
Indonesia
Malaysia
Maldives
Myanmar
Somalia
Sri Lanka
Thailand
Bangladesh
Kenya
Seychelles
South Africa
Tanzania
Yemen
Australia
Madagascar
Mauritius
Oman
The worst affected of these countries were Thailand, India, Sri Lanka, and Indonesia. According to Wikipedia's numbers, there were about 227, 898 casualties. The earthquake itself was a 9.2 magnitude. Many of the waves kicked up were up to 30 m (100 ft.) tall. It only lasted ten minutes...
What made the disaster so destructive and deadly was the preparedness of the nations hit. Despite the fact that the area of the Indian Ocean in which the earthquake occurred had a history of activity, no major populations were yet hit. The area was not viewed as a significant concern by nearby countries.
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There were no warning systems in place. Nations instead leaned on the hope that their people would be properly knowledgeable about signs of tsunamis and have prepared their own places of evacuation. This wasn't fruitless. Many of the coastal population had zero to little knowledge about what to look out for, and especially what to do in case of disaster.
The same could not be said for Tilly Smith.
Tilly took pride in learning from her school teacher, Andrew Kearney at Danes Hill School. She learned in his geography class about the warning signs and what to do's about several natural disasters, including tsunamis.
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Remembering the school lesson, that morning she witnessed the signs of a tsunami on the coast.
A quote from an interview done with her in 2005 was, "The water was really, really frothy. It wasn't calm, and it wasn't going in and then out. It was just coming in and in."
She immediately went to go alert her parents. At first they did not believe her, because they didn't see any large waves over the horizons. They decided to listen to her urgency though, and came to the security guards.
While trying to convince to the security guard of the threat, a nearby by English-speaking Japanese man had her say the word tsunami. He informed the group that he just heard that there was an earthquake in Sumatra. The beach was evacuated into one the resort buildings. Quickly after, a 9 m (30ft.) tsunami crashed through the shore, the evacuated peoples narrowly avoiding the event by seconds.
Mai Khao Beach was one out of few that day which had no causalities.
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Tilly Smith was awarded the Thomas Grey Special Award from the Marine Society & Sea Cadets. She earned the moniker Angel of the Beach. To this day Tilly is a face of coastal and natural disaster safety.
So what are the signs of a tsunami.
Any nearby or on location earthquakes
Loud roar from the ocean similar to a jet or train
rapid rise or fall of the water along the coast
What to do you in case of one
highest ground possible, as quick as possible
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