dbellingradt, to history German
@dbellingradt@historians.social avatar

How to illustrate natural disasters on an ?

After the enormous of 1618 in (then a city within the Three Leagues, Raetia) that wiped out the city and killed thousands, a based printer came up with this idea: using a liftable flap. The flap offers a before and after scenario; a reading engagement with the catastrophe. The printed flap is the .

Access: http://diglib.hab.de/drucke/ip-18/start.htm

A broadside with a flap showing a mudslide (VD17 23:676381V).

NewsDesk, to news
@NewsDesk@flipboard.social avatar

Rescuers continue their grim search for survivors after a massive landslide devastated a remote village in Papua New Guinea. AP has more: https://flip.it/nv-08Z

pixel, to architecture
@pixel@social.pixels.pizza avatar

The Wayfarers Chapel, a national historic landmark in LA, is being disassembled to protect it from further damage caused by geological movement.


https://www.archdaily.com/1016605/lloyd-wrights-historic-wayfarers-chapel-will-be-disassembled-due-to-landslide-risk

stefano, to earthquake
@stefano@bsd.cafe avatar

I remember this day well in 2012. I turned off the light at 1:15 of the night on May 20th after reading a book on my Kindle. I felt a slight tremor. It was said that it wasn't a seismic zone, so I thought it was just the tail end of a distant quake. I looked for information on my phone but found nothing. At 4:03 in the morning, I woke up to a strong quake. I heard objects falling and glass breaking (which I later found out were from my neighbor's house), everything was shaking, and suddenly, I started hearing the sounds of buildings collapsing. I was 10 km from the epicenter but only found out hours later. I immediately turned on the light, but the power went out. When the power came back, all phone lines were down, but my trusty 1mbit/sec ADSL was working. I was alone at home. I went outside and, having experience with earthquakes, urged my neighbors (still in disbelief) to run to the end of the street, to a parking lot away from all buildings. Roof tiles could fall. Strong aftershocks followed in the minutes after. They would continue for months, and occasionally, you can still feel them.

There were many collapses in the area. Together with a neighbor (a surveyor), we inspected the building and found no visible problems. It was a recent building, only a few years old. I went back inside to have breakfast around 5, much to the surprise of my neighbors who were urging me to leave. I turned on TV and news were still uncertain. They were just talking about a very strong earthquake in the norther part of Bologna). There were strong tremors all day long. It was a strange day. My friends wanted me to go to their place, far away. I decided to stay. My neighbors wanted me to go with them to the shopping center parking lot to sleep in the car. I stayed home. Some neighbors slept in tents in their gardens for months out of fear. That night, I just slept dressed on the couch.

There are many other details of that day that will stay in my mind forever.

BelfastRoadster, to nature
@BelfastRoadster@birds.town avatar

I found this deflated Mylar balloon on a nature reserve this morning.
Come on, folks. It’s 2024.
I’m pretty sure your seven-year-old could celebrate their birthday without these portable natural disasters.
Why haven’t these been banned? 😒😡

Aleenaa, to news
@Aleenaa@india.goonj.xyz avatar

The environment is in serious danger. Forest fires and natural disasters are causing a lot of damage and taking lives of people.

Thousands of people in Canada’s westernmost province of British Columbia (BC) have been evacuated from their homes as authorities warn that a enormous wildfire continues to grow.
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2024/5/13/thousands-evacuate-as-wildfire-grows-dramatically-in-western-canada?traffic_source=rss&utm_source=press.coop

@mastodonindians

pixel, to Hawaii
@pixel@social.pixels.pizza avatar

“Nine months after more than 100 people were killed and nearly 2,200 homes were destroyed, Gov. Josh Green says the state is making progress on rebuilding the historic town of Lahaina and improving its emergency preparedness.”


https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/hawaiis-governor-says-residents-displaced-wildfire-now-long-term-housi-rcna151704

marielgm, to environment
@marielgm@mastodon.mit.edu avatar

Oof, so much happening. After the catastrophic #floods in Rio Grande do Sul, Humanitarian OpenStreetMaps Team asks for volunteer work in mapping. See task #16723 tasks.hotosm.org #environment #naturaldisaster #dataactivism #GIS

Aleenaa, to news
@Aleenaa@india.goonj.xyz avatar
pixel, to Hawaii
@pixel@social.pixels.pizza avatar

A wetter-than-expected winter combined with an impending dry summer spells a risky few months for fire in Hawaii.


https://www.civilbeat.org/?p=1640420

Aleenaa, to news
@Aleenaa@india.goonj.xyz avatar

A promised increase of aid into Gaza has so far failed to materialise and now famine is under way to take hold of parts in the besieged coastal strip.

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2024/apr/12/first-thing-israel-still-blocking-aid-gaza-top-us-official--famine-under-way

@mastodonindians

formuchdeliberation, to Iceland
@formuchdeliberation@mastodon.world avatar

Lava poured from a volcanic fissure near the town of Grindavík, Iceland, in spring 2024. The eruption, which began on March 16 and remained active over two weeks later, was the largest in a string of four volcanic events on the Reykjanes peninsula starting in December 2023...
https://scitechdaily.com/lava-unleashed-icelands-fiery-spectacle-on-the-reykjanes-peninsula/

GregCocks, to 3dmodeling
@GregCocks@techhub.social avatar

Future Changes In Global Atmospheric Rivers Projected By CMIP6 Models

https://doi.org/10.1029/2023JD039359 <-- shared paper

maps and charts - (a) Atmospheric river (AR) characteristics, including duration, interval, area, and intensity during the DJF globally. The central plot displays the increase in AR frequency between the far-future (SSP585; 2070–2099) and the historical (1980–2009) periods, with the climatological AR frequency in the historical period represented by the contours. Black dots indicate unanimous frequency changes among CMIP6 models. The red rectangles are the boundaries of the target regions and the black hatches are the selected land regions. The surrounding plots show 2D Kernel Density Estimation (KDE) maps for AR characteristics over the historical period and far-future under different scenarios displayed in the bottom right corner for eight regions. The univariate distributions of the characteristics are shown on the outer axes of each subplot. (b) The comparison of the KDE maps for three selected regions with ARs detected with GuanWaliser_v2 and Mundhenk_v3 AR detection tools (ARDTs). Note that only the SSP585 scenario is available for the far-future period in these two data sets. The legend is the same as in Panel (a). Note that the figures of PanLu ARDT are presented based on daily scale data sets, while the figures of GuanWaliser_v2 and Mundhenk_v3 ARDTs are presented on 6-hourly scale data sets due to data accessibility.
graphic - what is the science behind atmospheric rivers
maps and charts - Projected increase in panel (a) atmospheric river (AR) frequency and (b) AR-induced precipitation for DJF and JJA in Northern Hemisphere and Southern Hemisphere under the SSP585 scenarios. The shading represents the differences between the far-future (2070–2099) and historical (1980–2009) periods, with contours delineating the historical climatology. ARs detected with the PanLu, GuanWaliser_v2 and Mundhenk_v3 method are all shown. Note that the figures of PanLu ARDT are presented based on daily scale data sets, while the figures of GuanWaliser_v2 and Mundhenk_v3 ARDTs are presented on 6-hourly scale data sets due to data accessibility.

longreads, to LongReads
@longreads@mastodon.world avatar

"Like so much else, this process exposed a profound divergence: the institutions that cyclone survivors looked to for help didn’t seem to grasp what they were experiencing."

For NZ Geographic, Rachel Morris reports on the aftermath of Cyclone Gabrielle—and the New Zealand residents who are still cleaning up, one year later: https://www.nzgeo.com/stories/cyclone-gabrielle/

GregCocks, to Geology
@GregCocks@techhub.social avatar

Major Fluvial Erosion And A 500-Mt Sediment Pulse Triggered By Lava-Dam Failure, Río Coca, Ecuador

https://doi.org/10.1002/esp.5751 <-- shared paper

photos - Former location of the Cascada San Rafael lava-dam waterfall and knickpoint on the Río Coca, viewed facing upstream. (a) Pre-collapse morphology of the waterfall, in 2012 (image from Ecuador Ministry of Tourism). Accommodation space upstream of the lava dam was filled with sediment. (b) The site was on 2 February 2020, shortly after a sinkhole (upstream of lava dam) captured the river. Dashed line shows the approximate location of the unconformable contact between the lava flow and underlying volcaniclastic avalanche deposits. (c) The site was on 22 February 2021 during the incipient collapse of the remaining arched edifice of the lava flow. (d) Later on 22 February 2021 after full collapse of the lava arch. (e) The site on 25 February 2021, shortly after the river overtopped and eroded through the debris dam. Photographs in (b) through (e) provided by the Corporacion Electrica del Ecuador.
map and chart - (a) Detailed map of the study reach (shown within box in Figure 1a), with river kilometres (rkm) shown referring to distance downstream of the Coca Codo Sinclair (CCS) dam and diversion intake. (b) Subsurface geologic cross-section of the study reached from rkm 0 to 22 (annotated using field observations of the authors and borehole information from INECEL [Instituto Ecuatoriano de Electrificacion], 1992). Dashed line shows the riverbed profile as of 2 December 2022, 1,034 days after the failure of the Cascada San Rafael knickpoint. Prior to the loss of the knickpoint in February 2020, the accommodation space upstream of the Cascada San Rafael had entirely filled with sediment. Geologic units are abbreviated as volcaniclastic breccia (Br), cohesive volcaniclastic avalanche deposits (CoAv), loose volcaniclastic avalanche deposits (LoAv), ancient alluvial deposits (All), lacustrine sediments (Lac), debris-flow deposits (Deb, a thin deposit around rkm 8–8.5). Lava flow, recent alluvial deposits and Mesozoic bedrock are also shown.
photo - waterfall, Río Coca, Ecuador before failure & erosion

mountainwitch, to Iceland
@mountainwitch@kolektiva.social avatar

I'm watching the Grindavik (Reykjanes) eruption that started again last night overrun the town with sadness for the people that lived there. We sit here in Canada under deep freeze while watching the fire of the Earth. Nature is scary.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P1e_MWJ1nQc

cheeseblintzes, to Japan
@cheeseblintzes@c.im avatar

It is 206am.

I did not have a Japanese Earthquake and Tsunami on my 2024 bingo card... that I literally posted within the last two hours.

Goddamn.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-67855990

AnimatedShortOfTheDay, to Argentina
@AnimatedShortOfTheDay@socel.net avatar

The Girl and the Tsunami (2021) [6 min] by Leo Campasso, Antonio Balseiro and Carlos Balseiro |

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AmvMCjspu2Q

itnewsbot, to Geology
@itnewsbot@schleuss.online avatar

What caused the volcanic tsunami that devastated a Greek island 373 years ago? - Enlarge / This view from an international volcano monitoring system sho... - https://arstechnica.com/?p=1979226

ilankelman, to climate
indianewswatch, to india
@indianewswatch@kolektiva.social avatar

257 Deaths, ₹ 7,000-Crore Property: Himachal's Huge Losses This Monsoon

The monsoon season commenced in Himachal Pradesh on June 24. According to the officials, the monsoon's death count stands at 257 lives lost due to a range of causes.

https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/257-deaths-rs-7-000-crore-losses-incurred-after-rains-floods-in-himachal-4295381

geographile, to earthquake
@geographile@sfba.social avatar
dbellingradt, to random German

How to illustrate natural disasters in early modern broadsides?

After the enormous landslide of 1618 in (then a city within the Three Leagues, Raetia) that wiped out the city and killed thousands, a Zurich based printer came up with this idea: using a liftable flap. The flap offers a before and after scenario; a reading engagement with the catastrophe. The printed flap is the mudslide.

Access the print (VD17 23:676381V): http://diglib.hab.de/drucke/ip-18/start.htm

The broadside with a flap: the printed flap made visible the mudslide.

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