-->We get these warnings regularly in New Zealand but this is in the Australian media
Earthquake
near a major city with death toll ‘unprecedented in human history'
a matter of time: Professor Iain Stewart
IT'S
only a matter of time before a huge earthquake strikes a major city
and results in a death toll "unprecedented in human history".
9
August, 2012
Well-known
Scottish scientist Iain Stewart delivered that grim prediction
yesterday in Brisbane during an address to a global geology
conference.
Professor
Stewart, a geologist and academic who has gained fame for multiple
BBC television series on the planet, said the risk of disaster has
grown because a growing number of mega-cities are built on or near
major earthquake faults.
Large
settlements since antiquity have been based on these fault lines
because they also help provide water and are usually located near
flat plains ideally suited for growing crops.
This
"fatal attraction" to dangerous areas was "actually a
good thing", because historically the trade-off was worth it
since earthquakes were rare and most cities were not that large, he
said.
While
earthquakes today were often less destructive because of improved
building codes, more people were affected because cities were larger,
Prof Stewart told delegates at the 34th International Geological
Congress
Despite
the danger of such hazards, people were still drawn to
earthquake-prone California and the US gulf states, which were
routinely hit by hurricanes.
Although
it might seem that the number of natural disasters around the world
is increasing, there are simply more people living in harm's way, and
that fact creates the illusion. "We create the template that
brings these disasters," Prof Stewart said.
Similarly,
people want to live only 20m from the beach, even in regions liable
to be struck by tsunamis. Even after properties have been destroyed,
many owners vow to rebuild.
Further
research was needed to understand why people continued to have such a
high threshold for living in danger zones and why they often chose to
ignore the science that could save their lives, he said.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.