Sunday 27 September 2015

PART 2 : HUMAN INSTIGATED DISASTERS (MAN MADE DISASTERS)


PART 2. HUMAN INSTIGATED DISASTERS (MAN MADE DISASTERS)


Human-instigated disasters are the consequence of technological hazards. Examples include stampedes, fires, transport accidents, CBRN Emergencies( Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear Emergencies) Industrial accidents. War and deliberate attacks may also be put in this category

Examples:

CHEMICAL ATTACK;

Halabja
year 1988
-Chemical Attack by Iraqi forces    over Northern Iraq Kurdhish populated
-Death toll around 5,000
-Injured more than 10,000








SYRIA CIVIL WAR


Damacus
Chemical Attacks done at Damacus area
-on 30th Aug2013
-at 12 locations

-1429 civilian deaths including 423 children









TOKYO SUBWAY


Sarin Gas( Nerve Agent )
-Deaths-12
Non-fatal injuries-about 1,050

Perpetrator- Aum Shinrikyo











CHEMICAL INDUSTRIAL ACCIDENT

Bhopal Gas Tragedy

On the night of 2–3 December 1984
-at the Union Carbide India Limited (UCIL)
-pesticide plant in Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh
Over 500,000 people were exposed to methyl isocyanate (MIC) gas and other chemicals
Estimates vary on the death toll. The official immediate death toll was 2,259. The government of Madhya Pradesh confirmed a total of 3,787 deaths related to the gas release.A government affidavit in 2006 stated that the leak caused 558,125 injuries, including 38,478 temporary partial injuries and approximately 3,900 severely and permanently disabling injuries.Others estimate that 8,000 died within two weeks, and another 8,000 or more have since died from gas-related diseases.



CHEMICAL TRANSPORTATION ACCIDENT

Although the major chemical accidents seem most threatening because they often kill people outright, it is the smaller, more routine accidents and spills that affect most people. Some of the most common spills involve tanker trucks and railroad tankers containing gasoline, chlorine, acid, or other industrial chemicals. Many spills occur during the transportation of hazardous materials; one study found that 18,000 hazardous materials spills occurred during 1976. In 1983, spills from 4,829 highway and 851 railroad accidents resulted in eight deaths, 191 injuries, and damages exceeding more than $110,000,000. The National Environmental Law Center reported that 34,500 accidents involving toxic chemicals were reported to the EPA's Emergency Response and Notification System between 1988 and 1992, meaning that on average, a toxic chemical accident was reported nineteen times a day in the United States, or nearly once every hour.


BIO WARFARE

A biological attack is the intentional release of a pathogen (disease causing agent) or Bio-toxin (poisonous substance produced by a living organism) against humans, plants, or animals. An attack against people could be used to cause illness, death, fear, societal disruption, and economic damage.

AGENTS

  • Plague
  • Cholera
  • Tularemia
  • Brucellosis
  • Q Fever
  • Smallpox
  • Monkeypox
  • Arboviral Encephalitides
  • Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers
  • Staphylococcal Enterotoxin B
  • Ricin
  • Botulinum Toxin
  • Mycotoxins

EXAMPLES

1.In 1985, Iraq began an offensive biological weapons program producing anthrax, Botulinum toxin, and Aflatoxin. During Operation Desert Storm, the coalition of allied forces faced the threat of chemical and biological agents. Following the Persian Gulf War, Iraq disclosed that it had bombs, Scud missiles, 122-mm rockets, and artillery shells armed with Botulinum toxin, Anthrax, and Aflatoxin. They also had spray tanks fitted to aircraft that could distribute agents over a specific target.

2.In September and October of 1984, 751 people were intentionally infected with Salmonella, an agent that causes food poisoning, when followers of the Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh contaminated restaurant salad bars in Oregon.

3.In 1994, a Japanese sect of the Aum Shinrikyo cult attempted an aerosolized (sprayed into the air) release of anthrax from the tops of buildings in Tokyo.

4.In 1995, two members of a Minnesota militia group were convicted of possession of ricin, which they had produced themselves for use in retaliation against local government officials.

5.In 1996, an Ohio man attempted to obtain Bubonic Plague cultures through the mail.

6.In 2001, anthrax was delivered by mail to U.S. media and government offices. There were four deaths.



RADIO-LOGICAL AND NUCLEAR EMERGENCY



A Radiological emergency is an emergency in which there is, or is perceived to be, a hazard due to radiation exposure from a source. As sources of radiation are used in various fields, including industry, medicine and research, Radiological emergencies may occur anywhere.

THESE EMERGENCIES CAN BE IN THE FORM OF THE FOLLOWING:


1. Nuclear Bombs(More Destructive than Atom Bomb)
2. Atom Bombs ( Hiroshima and Nagasaki)
3. RDD ( Radiological Dispersal Device)
   - Radio-active Source + IED(Improvised Explosive Device)
3. RED ( Radiological Exposure Device)

4. Unintentional
           a) Accident with the carriage of Radioactive Material during Transportation
b)Wrong / Faulty Practices with Radioactive material
Example: MAYAPURI Scrap Market -Cobalt-60
c)Failure of Machinery in at Nuclear Power Plant
Example: Chernobyl Nuclear power plant Blast
On April 26, 1986, a sudden surge of power during a reactor systems test destroyed Unit 4 of the nuclear power station at Chernobyl, Ukraine, in the former Soviet Union. The accident and the fire that followed released massive amounts of radioactive material into the environment.
After the accident, officials closed off the area within 30 kilometers (18 miles) of the plant, except for persons with official business at the plant and those people evaluating and dealing with the consequences of the accident and operating the undamaged reactors. The Soviet (and later on, Russian) government evacuated about 115,000 people from the most heavily contaminated areas in 1986, and another 220,000 people in subsequent years


RADIO ACTIVE MATERIALS AGENTS

1. URANIUM
2. THORIUM
3. CESIUM
4. COBALT
5. IRIDIUM
6. IODINE
7. STRONTIUM
8. AMERICIUM


RADIO LOGICAL /NUCLEAR DISASTER SCENARIO

Immediate and direct effect of 20 KT nuclear weapon detonation would affect
- about 65 sq.km of arae
-about 32 lakh inhabitants (polpulation density 0.5 lakh/sq.km
-about 3.2 lakh deaths in the first few months(-50% on 151 day)
-about 7.5 lakh will be injured affected due to INR
-Fallout zone app. 4000 sq.km may change on wind direction and velocity.
In case of Chernobyl it was more than 2,00,000 sq.km
-about 40 lakh will be affected due to fall out








Wednesday 23 September 2015

DISASTER , TERMS

DISASTER:
A disaster is a serious disruption of the functioning of a community or a society involving widespread human, material, economic or environmental losses and impacts, which exceeds the ability of the affected community or society to cope using its own resources.

3 important criteria's:

1. Serious disruption of society
2.Widespread loss of Human, material, economic or environmental
3. exceeds the ability of the local community to cope up using it own resources.



Disasters : 1980 to 2009




























         HAZARD

Hazard is the potentiality of a physical event that may cause loss of life or property


VULNERABILITIES

Vulnerabilities are the factors or processes - physical, social , economic and environmental- which increase the susceptibility of an area or a community to the impact of hazards

 RISK

Risk is defined as the probability of harmful consequences or expected losses ( deaths, injuries, property, livelihoods, Economic activity disrupted or environment damaged)

RISK = Hazards X Vulnerability



Tuesday 22 September 2015

PART 1: DISASTERS INDUCED BY NATURAL HAZARD (NATURAL DISASTERS)


DISASTER

A disaster is a serious disruption of the functioning of a community or a society involving widespread human, material, economic or environmental losses and impacts, which exceeds the ability of the affected community or society to cope using its own resources.

TYPES

1. DISASTERS INDUCED BY NATURAL HAZARD ( NATURAL DISASTERS)

2. HUMAN INSTIGATED DISASTERS (MAN MADE DISASTERS)


Examples of Natural Hazard:

  1. Earthquakes, 
  2. Landslides, 
  3. Volcanic Eruptions, 
  4. Floods, Hurricanes, 
  5. Tornadoes, 
  6. Blizzards, 
  7. Tsunamis, 
  8. Cyclones.
EARTHQUAKE :


Gujarat
-year 2001
- 20,000 deaths
-1,67,000 injured
-4,00,000 homes destroyed



LANDSLIDE:


Maharastra, India
year 2014
-Malin, Maharastra
-Human Deaths- 151
-Cattle -58




VOLCANIC ERUPTION:


Colombia
(Nevado del Ruiz (Colombia, 1985)
- Deaths-         23,080
-Injured 10,000
-Total Affected 12,700






FLOODS:


China
-year 1931
-Death toll -2,500,000–3,700,000








HURRICANE:


Bangladesh
-year 1970
-Bhola Cyclone
-East Pakistan (Bangladesh today)








TORNADO:


Bangladesh
-Year 1989
-Daulatpur-Salturia
-1300 deaths
-12,000 injured
-80,000 became homeless.









TSUNAMI :


INDIA OCEAN
-Year- 2004
-Indian Ocean (Sumatra, Indonesia)
-Estimated Number of Deaths: 350,000









CYCLONE:


ODISHA, INDIA
Year 1999
-Death 10,000
-275,000 homes were destroyed
-1.67 million people homeless








2. HUMAN INSTIGATED DISASTERS (MAN MADE DISASTERS)

Monday 21 September 2015

Part.1. INTRODUCTION TO ORUX MAPS

ORUX MAPS


























































































































































GIS , ONLINE MAPS and OFFLINE MAPS

WHAT IS GIS?


A geographic information system (GIS) is a system designed to capture, store, manipulate, analyze, manage, and present all types of spatial or geographical data.

What does GIS do?

It locates:
  • Assets, (water and sewer pipes)
  • Areas, (land use)
  • Incidents, (crime statistics)
  • Characteristics (disease mortality rates)
  • GIS is a way of organizing database records by tying them to geographically synchronized slices of the world so that “where” questions can be asked and answered.
What is Online Maps

Global on-line maps


These maps cover the world, but may have insufficient details in some areas.



  OpenStreetMap

ArcGIS Online (Esri)

Google Maps

Bing Maps
MapQuest
WikiMapia
HERE
Mappy
 ORUX MAP
  LOCUS MAP

OFFLINE MAPS


With the help of any Map Viewing Application if one can able to view the map without INTERNET CONNECTION, from the data stored in built- in Memory or External Memory Card .

Some Popular MAP VIEWING Applications support offline maps

1. ORUX MAPS
2. LOCUS MAPS
3. HERE MAPS
4. MAPS.ME
and many.........

WHY OFFLINE MAPS

There are plenty of reasons to download maps and store them on your Phone, not least the fact you won’t need an Internet connection to get around – even if your signal drops when traveling in remote locations, you’ll still be able to depend on Offline data to search for places, plan routes and navigate. 


Going offline makes things a lot cheaper

Download the maps using your Wi-Fi connection when you’re at home, and you won’t get caught out by roaming costs when you travel abroad. Going offline also means you won’t be using up your allotted data if you’re on a contract with a limited amount of data.

Faster than The Flash

It’s not just about cost, as offline mode also boasts loads of other benefits. It’s particularly fast to load, and because all the information is already stored locally on your phone, you won’t need to wait while route information or map tiles download, even when you’re panning or zooming the map. There’s no stuttering, no buffering and no chance of missing your turn while the connection catches up with your position.


No signal? No problem

Head out into the countryside, and there’s a good chance you’ll also take a hit when it comes to connectivity. And although there may be more telephone masts in the heart of a city than in the countryside, that doesn’t guarantee a good mobile reception: tall buildings can have an impact on your network connection. With the maps on your phone, however, none of these problems will matter one bit, and you’ll still be able to see exactly where you’re going wherever you are.

FROM NOW WE WILL SEE HOW TO PREPARE OFFLINE MAP AND USE IT

Before preparing offline map

lets see about the Popular Map

Part 1. Introduction to OruxMaps
Part 2. Some Important Features of OruxMaps
Part 3. How to Prepare Offline Maps