Earthquake Disasters in Latin America: A Holistic Approach (SpringerBriefs in Earth Sciences)
معرفی کتاب «Earthquake Disasters in Latin America: A Holistic Approach (SpringerBriefs in Earth Sciences)» نوشتهٔ Heriberta Castaños, Cinna Lomnitz (auth.)، منتشرشده توسط نشر Springer Netherlands : Imprint : Springer در سال 2012. این کتاب در فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.
This book is an attempt to demonstrate the analytical power of the holistic approach for understanding disasters. Six major earthquakes in Latin America are used as an example: the general idea is to place disasters in a broad social and regional context. Understanding disasters is a way of understanding the social system. The idea is to show that every major disaster is unique and different. Statistical methods may be useful for purposes of risk estimation but modern disasters are "systemic" and complex. In the chapter on the 2010 Chile earthquake we discuss the tsunami and why the system of tsunami alert did not work. The introductory chapter contains some basics of seismology (plate tectonics) and earthquake engineering. The 1985 Mexico earthquake describes why geology is important. Why was Mexico City founded in a lake? Technology must be adapted to the environment, not "imported" from possibly more advanced but different societies. The 1970 Peru earthquake is an example of disaster in a unique environment. Caracas 1967 takes us on a survey of different engineering solutions. And the 1960 Chile earthquake leads us on a retrospective survey--what has changed in Chile between the two major Chile earthquakes? A discussion on Charles Darwin’s observations of the 1835 Chile earthquake provides a fitting summary. Annotation This book is an attempt to demonstrate the analytical power of the holistic approach for understanding disasters. Six major earthquakes in Latin America are used as an example: the general idea is to place disasters in a broad social and regional context. Understanding disasters is a way of understanding the social system. The idea is to show that every major disaster is unique and different. Statistical methods may be useful for purposes of risk estimation but modern disasters are "systemic" and complex. In the chapter on the 2010 Chile earthquake we discuss the tsunami and why the system of tsunami alert did not work. The introductory chapter contains some basics of seismology (plate tectonics) and earthquake engineering. The 1985 Mexico earthquake describes why geology is important. Why was Mexico City founded in a lake? Technology must be adapted to the environment, not "imported" from possibly more advanced but different societies. The 1970 Peru earthquake is an example of disaster in a unique environment. Caracas 1967 takes us on a survey of different engineering solutions. And the 1960 Chile earthquake leads us on a retrospective survey--what has changed in Chile between the two major Chile earthquakes? A discussion on Charles Darwins observations of the 1835 Chile earthquake provides a fitting summary Front Matter....Pages i-viii Darwin and Plate Tectonics....Pages 1-13 The Great 1960 Chile Megaquake....Pages 15-20 The 1967 Caracas Earthquake....Pages 21-24 The 1970 Peru Earthquake....Pages 25-30 The 1985 Mexico Earthquake....Pages 31-39 The 2010 Haiti Earthquake....Pages 41-45 The 2010 Chile Earthquake....Pages 47-53 A List of Significant Earthquakes in Latin America....Pages 55-56 Conclusions and Recommendations....Pages 57-65
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