Smartworld.Asia Specworld.In
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Information on Natural Disasters Part- I Introduction
Information on Natural Disasters Part- I Introduction Astrology is the one that gave us the word ‘disaster’. Many believe that when the stars and planets are in malevolent position in our natal charts bad events or bad things would happen. Everyone one of us loves to avoid such bad things or disasters. The disaster is the impact of both natural and man-made events that influence our life and environment that surrounds us. Now as a general concept in academic circles, the disaster is a consequence of vulnerability and risk. The time often demands for appropriate reaction to face vulnerability and risk. The vulnerability is more in densely populated areas where if, a bad event strikes leads to greater damage, loss of life and is called as disaster. In other sparely populated area the bad event may only be a risk or hazard. Developing countries suffer the greatest costs when a disaster hits – more than 95 percent of all deaths caused by disasters occur in developing countries, and losses due to natural disasters are 20 times greater as a percentage of GDP in developing countries than in industrialized countries. A disaster can leads to financial, environmental, or human losses. The resulting loss depends on the capacity of the population to support or resist the disaster. The term natural has consequently been disputed because the events simply are not hazards or disasters without human involvement. Types of disasters Any disaster can be classified either as ‘Natural’ or ‘man-made’. The most common natural disasters that are known to the man kind are hailstorms, thunderstorm, very heavy snowfall, very heavy rainfalls, squalls, gale force winds, cyclones, heat and cold waves, earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, floods, and droughts which cause loss to property and life. -
Volcanic Gases
ManuscriptView metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE Click here to download Manuscript: Edmonds_Revised_final.docx provided by Apollo Click here to view linked References 1 Volcanic gases: silent killers 1 2 3 2 Marie Edmonds1, John Grattan2, Sabina Michnowicz3 4 5 6 3 1 University of Cambridge; 2 Aberystwyth University; 3 University College London 7 8 9 4 Abstract 10 11 5 Volcanic gases are insidious and often overlooked hazards. The effects of volcanic gases on life 12 13 6 may be direct, such as asphyxiation, respiratory diseases and skin burns; or indirect, e.g. regional 14 7 famine caused by the cooling that results from the presence of sulfate aerosols injected into the 15 16 8 stratosphere during explosive eruptions. Although accounting for fewer fatalities overall than some 17 18 9 other forms of volcanic hazards, history has shown that volcanic gases are implicated frequently in 1910 small-scale fatal events in diverse volcanic and geothermal regions. In order to mitigate risks due 20 2111 to volcanic gases, we must identify the challenges. The first relates to the difficulty of monitoring 22 2312 and hazard communication: gas concentrations may be elevated over large areas and may change 2413 rapidly with time. Developing alert and early warning systems that will be communicated in a timely 25 2614 fashion to the population is logistically difficult. The second challenge focuses on education and 27 2815 understanding risk. An effective response to warnings requires an educated population and a 2916 balanced weighing of conflicting cultural beliefs or economic interests with risk. -
World Congress on Risk 2012 “Risk and Development in a Changing World”
Society for Risk Analysis World Congress on Risk 2012 “Risk and Development in a Changing World” FINAL PROGRAM Sydney Convention and Exhibition Centre Darling Harbour, Sydney, Australia 17-20 July 2012 Table of Contents General Information ..........................................................................................................................1 Schedule at a Glance .......................................................................................................................2 Plenary Speaker Biographies ...........................................................................................................3 Session and Symposia Supporters ..................................................................................................6 Wednesday Sessions and Plenary Luncheon ..................................................................................7 Wednesday pm/Thursday am Poster, Session 1 ............................................................................10 Thursday Plenary and Sessions .....................................................................................................12 Thursday pm/Friday am Poster, Session 2.....................................................................................14 Friday Sessions and Plenary Luncheon .........................................................................................17 Abstracts (Alphabetical by Speaker) ..............................................................................................21 Author Index ...................................................................................................................................82 -
Press Release
PRESS RELEASE * To be released immediately SUDESTADA JAKARTA LAUNCHES SUDESTADA HELADERIA 31 January 2021, Jakarta: Kicking off the New Year in high spirits, the Argentinian tastemaker, Sudestada Bar, Grill and Cafe, is excited to launch their gelato and sorbet line, Sudestada Heladeria. Taking pride in their Argentinian culinary traditions of craftsmanship and fine foods, Sudestada Heladeria’s gelato and sorbet are made fresh daily with the best ingredients available from all over the world. The word heladeria is the Spanish word for ice cream parlor. All around Argentina, there are heladerias or ice cream stalls at every corner. The Argentinian affinity to gelato is phenomenal. To use the world love is an understatement. In the early 1900s, Italians migrated to Argentina, bringing with them their secret recipes for their gelato. Over the years Argentinians have taken these recipes and have made them their own. The result is a soft and creamy gelato with a lot of density with a smooth mouth feel. Unlike normal ice cream, Argentinian gelato is malleable and is served in a cup or cone with sculpted high like a peak. Sudestada Heladeria brings this unique Argentinian gelato to Jakarta. And like any heladeia in Buenos Aires, don’t be surprised to see as many as 24 flavors at any given time. Don’t be overwhelmed but these flavors are intense and are usually packed with toppings and ingredients. Above every other flavor is Dulce de Leche, made with the same care and love as the dulce de leche milk confection you have already probably tasted at Sudestada. -
Sudestada-ALL-Menu-2.Pdf
est. 2019 ALL DAY MENU #SudestadaJakarta BIENVENIDO A SUDESTADA JAKARTA Welcome to SUDESTADA JAKARTA, a specialty Argentinian Grill, Bar and Cafe inspired by the vivacious Latin culture. SUDESTADA /su.des.ta.da/ (n.) “powerful wind, particularly the cool strong breeze before a mighty storm” is regarded as an auspicious name in Argentinian culture that brings good luck. Bringing vibrant Argentinian charm to Jakarta’s Aer a taste of our honest cuisine and being culinary scene, Sudestada's guests can expect a immersed in the enchanting neoclassical wholesome and authentic dining experience. ambiance, the wines and the culture, you may Under the helm of our well-seasoned executive come as a guest, but you will leave as el amigo. chef, Victor Taborda, an Argentine native with his team of experienced cooks, their passion and Buen provecho, hope create a new benchmark for Latin culinary oerings, taking them to new heights with contemporary touches that translates from the Enjoy�Your�Meal! plate to your palate. @sudestadajakarta 1 Chef Victor is an Argentinian native of Neuquen, a beautiful town on northern Patagonia. Spent his childhood helping out in his father’s steakhouse has allowed Victor to absorb the concepts of Argentinian Asado by blood. He shares his profound love for his country and its remarkable cuisine to a wider audience who are constantly hungry for food and authentic experiences, Jakarta and beyond. Chef Victor Taborda Argentinian Style Pizzas PIZZAS ARGENTINAS NAPOLITANA Tomatoes, oregano, green olives ..................... 140 PEPPERONI Beef pepperoni .................................................. 150 MORRONES Y JAMON Red bell peppers and ham ................... 170 MOZZARELLA Tomato sauce and olives ............................... -
Weather, Current and Routing Brief the Clipper 11/12 Round the World
Weather, Current and Routing Brief The Clipper 11/12 Round the World Race Prepared for the Race Skippers by Simon Rowell 27th April 2011 1. Leg One - Europe to Rio de Janeiro (early August to mid September) 4 1.1. The Route 4 1.2. The Weather 6 1.2.1. The Iberian Peninsula to the Canaries 6 1.2.2. The Canaries 10 1.2.3. The Canaries to the ITCZ, via the Cape Verdes 11 1.2.4. The ITCZ in the Atlantic 13 1.2.5. The ITCZ to Cabo Frio 16 1.3. Currents 18 1.3.1. The Iberian Peninsula to the Equator 18 1.3.2. The Equator to Rio 20 2. Leg 2 – Rio de Janeiro to Cape Town (mid September to mid October) 22 2.1. The Route 22 2.2. The Weather 22 2.3. Currents 27 3. Leg 3 – Cape Town to Western Australia (October to November) 29 3.1. The Route 29 3.2. The Weather 30 3.2.1. Southern Indian Ocean Fronts 34 3.3. Currents 35 3.3.1 Currents around the Aghulas Bank 35 3.3.2 Currents in the Southern Indian Ocean 37 4. Leg 4 –Western Australia to Wellington to Eastern Australia (mid November to December) 4.1. The Route 38 4.2. The Weather 39 4.2.1. Cape Leeuwin to Tasmania 39 4.2.2. Tasmania to Wellington and then to Gold Coast 43 4.3. Currents 47 5. Leg 5 – Gold Coast to Singapore to Qingdao (early January to end of February) 48 5.1. -
Catalogo 2019 INGLES Web2.Pdf
BIENALSUR 2019 This project was conceived and developed by the Universidad Nacional de Tres de Febrero BIENALSUR 2019 — BIENALSUR General Direction International Curatorial Council Aníbal Jozami BIENALSUR 2019 Stephane Aquin (CAN) Artistic and Academic Direction Ferran Barenblit (ESP) Diana Wechsler Regina Teixeira de Barros (BRA) Manolo Borja (ESP) Institutional Direction Ramón Castillo (CHL) Martín Kauffmann Marcello Dantas (BRA) Estrella de Diego (ESP) General Advisor Simon Djami (CMR) Marlise Ilhesca Andrés Duprat (ARG) Ticio Escobar (PRY) Legal Advisor João Fernandes (PRT) Mauricio de Nuñez Clara Garavelli (GBR) Marta Gili (ESP/FRA) Coordination of Institutional Relations Fábio Magalhães (BRA) Carlos Peralta José Carlos Mariátegui (PER) Fabián Blanco Johannes Odenthal (DEU) Catherine Petigas (FRA/ GBR) Curatorial Council BIENALSUR 2019 Agustín Pérez Rubio (ESP) Liliana Piñeiro (ARG) Nada Shabout (USA) Marina Aguerre (ARG) Nayla Tamraz (LBN) Florencia Battiti (ARG) Marie-Cecile Zinsou (BEN) Benedetta Casini (ITA) Fernando Farina (ARG) Honorary International Council Afshan Almassi Sturdza Ana Gilligan Rubens Ricupero Jean-Paul Fitoussi Enrique Iglesias Carlos Ivan Simonsen Leal Elizabeth Dulanto de Miró Quesada Academic Committee Academia de Bellas Artes de París (FRA) Escuela Municipal de Bellas Artes de Valparaíso (CHL) Escuela Nacional Superior Autónoma de Bellas Artes (PER) Fundación Álvarez Penteado (BRA) Fundación Getulio Vargas (BRA) Instituto Universitario Sudamericano (URY) Universidad Abdelmalek Essaâdi de Tánger (MAR) Universidad -
A Database of the Economic Impacts of Historical Volcanic Eruptions M Goujon, Hajare El Hadri, Raphael Paris
A database of the economic impacts of historical volcanic eruptions M Goujon, Hajare El Hadri, Raphael Paris To cite this version: M Goujon, Hajare El Hadri, Raphael Paris. A database of the economic impacts of historical volcanic eruptions. 2021. hal-03186803 HAL Id: hal-03186803 https://hal.uca.fr/hal-03186803 Preprint submitted on 31 Mar 2021 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access L’archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est archive for the deposit and dissemination of sci- destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents entific research documents, whether they are pub- scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, lished or not. The documents may come from émanant des établissements d’enseignement et de teaching and research institutions in France or recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires abroad, or from public or private research centers. publics ou privés. C E N T R E D 'ÉTUDES ET DE RECHERCHES SUR LE DEVELOPPEMENT INTERNATIONAL SÉRIE ÉTUDES ET DOCUMENTS A database of the economic impacts of historical volcanic eruptions Hajare El Hadri Michaël Goujon Raphaël Paris Études et Documents n° 14 March 2021 To cite this document: El Hadri H., Goujon M., Paris R. (2021) “A database of the economic impacts of historical volcanic eruptions ”, Études et Documents, n°14, CERDI. CERDI POLE TERTIAIRE 26 AVENUE LÉON BLUM F- 63000 CLERMONT FERRAND TEL. + 33 4 73 17 74 00 FAX + 33 4 73 17 74 28 http://cerdi.uca.fr/ Études et Documents n°14, CERDI, 2021 The authors Hajare El Hadri Post-doctoral researcher, Université Clermont -
Artifacts and Natural Disasters in Nigeria: the Riverine Experiences
International Journal of Social Sciences and Management Research Vol. 4 No. 8 2018 ISSN: 2545-5303 www.iiardpub.org Artifacts and Natural Disasters in Nigeria: The Riverine Experiences Eluozo Collins Department of curriculum and Instructional Technology (Science Education Option) Faculty of Education Ignatius Ajuru University of Education, Port Harcourt, Nigeria [email protected], [email protected] Abstract Nigeria is a country endowed with enormous natural resources located in the Western Sub- Sahara of Africa. The country is conceived to have existed before 1100 years before Christ. The country Nigeria and its environs is characterized by multiethnic diversity and diverse history of religious beliefs. The country was cohered by the British missionaries and it was granted independence in 1960 and a republic in 1963. Nigeria’s land mass is featured by dry, costal and swampy ecosystem. According to the holy bible, God used disasters to punish and cleanse the planet earth due to man’s disobedience and till date mankind has not found solutions to various types of artifact and natural disasters that have besieged the planet. How these disasters erupts, unlash mayhems and devastate the earth was the focal point of the study. The paper discussed lithosphere disasters, artifacts, atmospheric and hydrosphere disasters, there various impacts on the riverine communities and disasters benefits as well losses. The paper concluded with recommendations that could foster purposive solutions that can help in containing these catastrophes against mankind. Keywords: Nigeria, Disasters, Bible. Planet, NEMA, Artifact, Natural, Flood, Fire, Lithosphere, Hydrosphere, Atmosphere, Earthquake, Sinkholes, Terrorism, Volcanic, Eruption. Cataclysmic, Storms, Temperature. Introduction Nigeria is a country located in the sub-Saharan of the West Africa, endowed with all natural resources for human existence. -
Diapositiva 1
Anticipando la crecida – Anticipating the flood Presented in this occasion by Federico Robledo Departamento de Ciencias de la Atmósfera y los Océanos. FCEN/UBA. UMI-IFAECI/CNRS, Buenos Aires, Argentina, Centro de Investigaciones del Mar y de la Atmósfera. CONICET.UBA,, UMI3351-IFAECI/CNRS-CONICET-UBA Buenos Aires, Argentina [email protected] Montevideo, Uruguay 17-21 March, 2014 In Argentina, traditionally the scientific question are performed by the researcher As an alternative and looking for a paradigm change, we may think that the scientific question could be perform from the state / government and from the society For what? To guide research issues towards solving specific problems So, researchers, along with neighbors and a local government of a district the province of Buenos Aires, pose the question: How anticipate the flood? That question is addressed by an interdisciplinary and intersectorial work: •Anthropologists, •physical geographers, •meteorologists, •oceanographers, •hydraulic engineers, •computers •architects, •territorial referents 19 july, 2013, Club Pejerrey, La Ribera. Interdisciplinary and intersectorial workshop and so is “born” .... Anticipando la crecida – Anticipating the flood Río de la Plata / La Plate river, Quilmes 8 June, 2013 Robledo, Federico 1(*); Moreira, Diego 1 ; Falco, Magdalena 1 ; Murgida, Ana 2 ; Cad, María 2 ; Partucci, Hugo 2; Gatti, Ignacio 2; Duvielle, Mariano 3; Re, Mariano 4; Lecertura, Emilio 4; Kazimierski, Leandro 4; Etala, Paula 5; Briche, Elodie 6; Campetella, Claudia 7; Ruiz, Juan 1; Vera, Carolina 1 ; Saulo, Celeste 1; Simionatto, Claudia 1; Saraceno, Martin 1; Luz Clara, Moira 1; D Onofrio, Enrique 8; Dragani, Walter 9; Bertolotti, Matias 10; Saucedo, Marcos 1; Vidal, Ricardo 1 Juan José Mateos 8; Gustavo Pol 9, Raul Oviedo 9, Néstor Guglielmino 8 1 Departamento de Ciencias de la Atmósfera y los Océanos, Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, UBA.; 2 Centro de Investigaciones del Mar y la Atmósfera (CONICET-UBA). -
Detecting Gas-Rich Hydrothermal Vents in Ngozi Crater Lake Using
www.nature.com/scientificreports OPEN Detecting gas-rich hydrothermal vents in Ngozi Crater Lake using integrated exploration tools Received: 16 May 2019 Egbert Jolie1,2,3 Accepted: 7 August 2019 Gas-rich hydrothermal vents in crater lakes might pose an acute danger to people living nearby due Published: xx xx xxxx to the risk of limnic eruptions as a result of gas accumulation in the water column. This phenomenon has been reported from several incidents, e.g., the catastrophic Lake Nyos limnic eruption. CO2 accumulation has been determined from a variety of lakes worldwide, which does not always evolve in the same way as in Lake Nyos and consequently requires a site-specifc hazard assessment. This paper discusses the current state of Lake Ngozi in Tanzania and presents an efcient approach how major gas-rich hydrothermal feed zones can be identifed based on a multi-disciplinary concept. The concept combines bathymetry, thermal mapping of the lake foor and gas emission studies on the water surface. The approach is fully transferable to other volcanic lakes, and results will help to identify high-risk areas and develop suitable monitoring and risk mitigation measures. Due to the absence of a chemical and thermal stratifcation of Lake Ngozi the risk of limnic eruptions is rather unlikely at present, but an adapted monitoring concept is strongly advised as sudden CO2 input into the lake could occur as a result of changes in the magmatic system. Intense gas emissions at the geosphere-atmosphere interface is a common process in volcanically and tectoni- 1 cally active regions. -
Lake Nyos, a Multirisk and Vulnerability Appraisal
geosciences Article Lake Nyos, a Multirisk and Vulnerability Appraisal Mesmin Tchindjang ID Department of Geography, Faculty of Arts Letters and Social Sciences, Campus of Ngoa Ekellé, The University of Yaoundé 1, PO BOX 755 Yaoundé, Cameroon; [email protected] or [email protected]; Tel.: +237-699-85-59-26 or +237-679-30-88-15 Received: 13 July 2018; Accepted: 20 August 2018; Published: 21 August 2018 Abstract: Situated at the northern flank of the Oku Massif, Lake Nyos crater epitomizes landscape features originating from volcanic explosions during the Quaternary. The Cameroon Volcanic Line (CVL), to which it belongs, constitutes the most active volcanic region in Cameroon. In 1986, an outgas explosion occurred from beneath the lake and killed 1746 people in several neighbouring villages. The event influenced a radial area of 25 to 40 km wide, particularly in eastern and western direction. This was mainly due to: (1) the rugged nature of the landscape (fault fields), which enabled the heavier gas to follow valleys framed by faults corridors without affecting elevated areas; and (2) the seasonal dominating western wind direction, which channeled the gas along tectonic corridors and valleys. This paper assesses the geological risk and vulnerability in the Lake Nyos before and after several proposal to mitigate future outgas events. Remotely sensed data, together with GIS tools (topographic maps, aerial photographs), helped to determine and assess lineaments and associated risks. A critical grid combining severity and frequency analysis was used to assess the vulnerability of the local population. There is evidence that along the main fault directions (SW–NE), anthropogenic activities are most intensive and they may play an aggravating role for disasters.