Natural Hazards
Natural hazard: any natural process that can be dangerous to people
Can be geologic in origin (eg. earthquakes)
Can be meteorologic in origin (eg. thunder storms)
Can be biologic in origin (eg. invasive species)
This class will focus on natural hazards with geological origins
Ways to document natural hazards include:
Frequency: how often a natural hazard occurs
Duration: how often a natural hazard lasts
Areal extent: how big of an area a natural hazard effects
Complex two-way relationship
People are affected by the environmental conditions in which they live
The environment is affected by the people who inhabit it
Hazard risk: a measurement of how much danger natural hazards cause
Who’s vulnerable?
How vulnerable are they?
Partially defined by the likelihood of the hazard event itself and partly risk is defined by what would likely happen to the people effected by the event
Risk assessment: the process of measuring risk
How many people are in the area and how close do they live to the hazard?
This can also go into human factors such as cultural and political climate, and how these may influence people’s responses to hazards
Risk is often a product of the socioeconomic makeup of an area
Some risk assessments compound various factors into a single risk assessment
These, however, often simplify death and destruction to simply numbers, often monetizing them
Eg. Risk = probability of the event * costs of the damages
The insurance industry generally spends the most time, money, and effort on calculating risk assessments
A person who performs such assessments is an actuary
Nonresponse
Choosing not to act or respond to a potentially risky situation such as a natural hazard
Most people live in places with long histories of habitation and communities with long histories of living with the environments of those places with some awareness and experience with the potential dangers
Sometimes, communities lack the resources to take effective action following natural disasters
Action
Moving → many people lack the financial and logistical resources to move
Plan in advance, develop strategies to react to disasters before they occur
Community resilience: how well and how fast a community can recover from a disaster
Mitigation: attempts to anticipate the possibilities of natural hazards and develop ways to reduce the negative impacts of those event
Natural hazard: any natural process that can be dangerous to people
Can be geologic in origin (eg. earthquakes)
Can be meteorologic in origin (eg. thunder storms)
Can be biologic in origin (eg. invasive species)
This class will focus on natural hazards with geological origins
Ways to document natural hazards include:
Frequency: how often a natural hazard occurs
Duration: how often a natural hazard lasts
Areal extent: how big of an area a natural hazard effects
Complex two-way relationship
People are affected by the environmental conditions in which they live
The environment is affected by the people who inhabit it
Hazard risk: a measurement of how much danger natural hazards cause
Who’s vulnerable?
How vulnerable are they?
Partially defined by the likelihood of the hazard event itself and partly risk is defined by what would likely happen to the people effected by the event
Risk assessment: the process of measuring risk
How many people are in the area and how close do they live to the hazard?
This can also go into human factors such as cultural and political climate, and how these may influence people’s responses to hazards
Risk is often a product of the socioeconomic makeup of an area
Some risk assessments compound various factors into a single risk assessment
These, however, often simplify death and destruction to simply numbers, often monetizing them
Eg. Risk = probability of the event * costs of the damages
The insurance industry generally spends the most time, money, and effort on calculating risk assessments
A person who performs such assessments is an actuary
Nonresponse
Choosing not to act or respond to a potentially risky situation such as a natural hazard
Most people live in places with long histories of habitation and communities with long histories of living with the environments of those places with some awareness and experience with the potential dangers
Sometimes, communities lack the resources to take effective action following natural disasters
Action
Moving → many people lack the financial and logistical resources to move
Plan in advance, develop strategies to react to disasters before they occur
Community resilience: how well and how fast a community can recover from a disaster
Mitigation: attempts to anticipate the possibilities of natural hazards and develop ways to reduce the negative impacts of those event