Paper Search Console

Home Search Page About Contact

Journal Title

Title of Journal: Nat Hazards

Search In Journal Title:

Abbravation: Natural Hazards

Search In Journal Abbravation:

Publisher

Springer Netherlands

Search In Publisher:

DOI

10.1007/bf01931840

Search In DOI:

ISSN

1573-0840

Search In ISSN:
Search In Title Of Papers:

DISASTER a GIS database on hydrogeomorphologic d

Authors: J L Zêzere S Pereira A O Tavares C Bateira R M Trigo I Quaresma P P Santos M Santos J Verde
Publish Date: 2014/01/04
Volume: 72, Issue: 2, Pages: 503-532
PDF Link

Abstract

In the last century Portugal was affected by several natural disasters of hydrogeomorphologic origin that often caused high levels of destruction However data on past events related to floods and landslides were scattered The Disaster project aims to bridge the gap on the availability of a consistent and validated hydrogeomorphologic database for Portugal by creating disseminating and exploiting a GIS database on disastrous floods and landslides for the period 1865–2010 which is available in http//riskamulpt/disaster/en Data collection is steered by the concept of disaster used within the Disaster project Therefore any hydrogeomorphologic case is stored in the database if the occurrence led to casualties or injuries and missing evacuated or homeless people independently of the number of people affected The sources of information are 16 national regional and local newspapers that implied the analysis of 145344 individual newspapers The hydrogeomorphologic occurrences were stored in a database containing two major parts the characteristics of the hydrogeomorphologic case and the corresponding damages In this work the main results of the Disaster database are presented A total of 1621 disastrous floods and 281 disastrous landslides were recorded and registered in the database These occurrences were responsible for 1251 dead people The obtained results do not support the existence of any exponential increase in events in time thus contrasting with the picture provided to Portugal by the Emergency Events Database Floods were more frequent during the period 1936–1967 and occurred mostly from November to February Landslides were more frequent in the period 1947–1969 and occurred mostly from December to MarchThis research was supported by the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology FCT through the project DISASTER—GIS database on hydrogeomorphologic disasters in Portugal a tool for environmental management and emergency planning PTDC/CSGEO/103231/2008 S Pereira is a PostDoc fellow funded by FCT SFRH/BPD/69002/2010 M Santos is a PhD fellow funded by FCT SFRH/BD/70239/2010


Keywords:

References


.
Search In Abstract Of Papers:
Other Papers In This Journal:

  1. Simulation of debris flows in the Central Andes based on Open Source GIS: possibilities, limitations, and parameter sensitivity
  2. Integrating long-term seismic risk changes into improving emergency response and land-use planning: a case study for the Hsinchu City, Taiwan
  3. Quantitatively analyze the impact of land use/land cover change on annual runoff decrease
  4. Coastal flooding due to synoptic scale, meso-scale and remote forcings
  5. Deformation analysis of a burst red mud reservoir using combined descending and ascending pass ENVISAT ASAR data
  6. Delineation of small-scale landforms relative to flood inundation in the western Red River delta, northern Vietnam using remotely sensed data
  7. Determinants of the increased CO 2 emission and adaption strategy in Chinese energy-intensive industry
  8. Multifractality in seismic sequences of NW Himalaya
  9. Postseismic relaxation due to Bhuj earthquake on January 26, 2001: possible mechanisms and processes
  10. Local politicians as linking social capital: an empirical test of political behavior after Japan’s 3/11 disasters
  11. Research on multi-objective joint optimal flood control model for cascade reservoirs in river basin system
  12. Extremely cool summers in Central and Eastern Europe (1951–2010)
  13. Land-use planning for natural hazards in New Zealand: the setting, barriers, ‘burning issues’ and priority actions
  14. Public health consequences of the 2008 Hurricane Ike windstorm in Ohio, USA
  15. Assessing the immediate and short-term impact of flooding on residential property participant behaviour
  16. Flood risk perception in Central-Eastern European members states of the EU: a review
  17. Process-based design flood estimation in ungauged basins by conditioning model parameters on regional hydrological signatures
  18. Soft computing and GIS for landslide susceptibility assessment in Tawaghat area, Kumaon Himalaya, India
  19. Indigenous knowledge and the near field population response during the 2007 Solomon Islands tsunami
  20. Operational tropical cyclone intensity prediction—an empirical technique
  21. Characterization and mechanism of regional land subsidence in the Yellow River Delta, China
  22. A comparative study on the style of paleotsunami deposits at two sites on the west coast of India
  23. Documentary proxies and interdisciplinary research on historic geomorphologic hazards: a discussion of the current state from a central European perspective
  24. Segmentation of Main Boundary Thrust and Main Central Thrust in Western Himalaya for assessment of seismic hazard
  25. Simultaneous optimization of evacuation route and departure time based on link-congestion mitigation
  26. Effect of damage evolution of coal on permeability variation and analysis of gas outburst hazard with coal mining
  27. Probabilistic seismic hazard analysis for Kakrapar atomic power station, Gujarat, India
  28. Resource allocation for regional earthquake risk mitigation: a case study of Tehran, Iran
  29. Selected physical parameters as determinants of flood fatalities in Bangladesh, 1972–2013
  30. Chlorophyll concentration and surface temperature changes associated with earthquakes
  31. Drought hazard assessment in typical corn cultivated areas of China at present and potential climate change
  32. Community resilience, latent resources and resource scarcity after an earthquake: Is society really three meals away from anarchy?
  33. Seismic triggering of atmospheric variables prior to the major earthquakes in the Middle East within a 12-year time-period of 2002–2013
  34. Climate change and increased risk for the insurance sector: a global perspective and an assessment for the Netherlands
  35. Observations of volcanic emissions from space: current and future perspectives
  36. Resilience and seismic risk perception at school: a geoethical experiment in Aiello Calabro, southern Italy
  37. An android intelligent mobile terminal application: field data survey system for forest fires
  38. A method to reveal climatic variables triggering slope failures at high elevation
  39. Land use history and status of land desertification in the Heihe River basin
  40. Spatial and temporal changes in flood hazard potential at coastal lowland area: a case study in the Kujukuri Plain, Japan
  41. Analysis of 2010-flood causes, nature and magnitude in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan
  42. Tsunami vulnerability assessment in urban areas using numerical model and GIS
  43. Quantitative monitoring of gravity erosion using a novel 3D surface measuring technique: validation and case study
  44. Landslides on the Loess Plateau of China: a latest statistics together with a close look
  45. Performance of general circulation models and their ensembles for the prediction of drought indices over India during summer monsoon
  46. Taming global flood disasters. Lessons learned from Dutch experience
  47. Evaluation of liquefaction in Karasu River floodplain after the October 23, 2011, Van (Turkey) earthquake
  48. Spatial dependencies in wind-related housing damage
  49. Changes of rural to urban areas in hydrograph characteristics on watershed divisions
  50. Contextualizing vulnerability assessment: a support to geo-risk management in central Africa
  51. Into the firing line: civilian ingress during the 2013 “Red October” bushfires, Australia
  52. Simulation of earthquake-induced hazards of falling exterior non-structural components and its application to emergency shelter design
  53. Micro-sized enterprises: vulnerability to flash floods
  54. Global mapping of storm surges and the assessment of coastal vulnerability
  55. Improving landslide hazard and risk mapping in Guatemala using terrain aspect
  56. An evaluation of disaster risk reduction (DRR) approaches for coastal delta cities: a comparative analysis
  57. Exploring Taiwanese teachers’ perceptions toward and knowledge of climatic hazard mitigation
  58. Flood recovery and property acquisition in Cedar Rapids, Iowa
  59. Provincial evaluation of vulnerability to geological disaster in China and its influencing factors: a three-stage DEA-based analysis
  60. Identification and assessment of heavy rainfall–induced disaster potentials in Taipei City
  61. A systemic analysis of typhoon risk across China
  62. News coverage of drought impacts and vulnerability in the US Carolinas, 1998–2007
  63. An atmospheric instability derived with MODIS profile using real-time direct broadcast data over the Indian region
  64. Using tree-ring signals and numerical model to identify the snow avalanche tracks in Kastamonu, Turkey
  65. Seismic scenario including site-effect determination in Torreperogil and Sabiote, Jaén (Spain), after the 2013 earthquake sequence
  66. Integration and magnitude homogenization of the Egyptian earthquake catalogue
  67. Comparison of high-resolution TRMM-based precipitation products during tropical cyclones in the North Indian Ocean
  68. Intermodal humanitarian logistics model based on maritime transportation in Istanbul
  69. Model for prediction of sea dike breaching initiated by breaking wave impact
  70. Seismo-ionospheric precursory anomalies detection from DEMETER satellite data based on data mining
  71. A protective seam with nearly whole rock mining technology for controlling coal and gas outburst hazards: a case study
  72. The establishment of gas accident risk tolerability criteria based on F–N curve in China
  73. Basin-scale spatial soil erosion variability: Pingshuo opencast mine site in Shanxi Province, Loess Plateau of China

Search Result: