Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Effective estimation of Tsunami Coastal Impacts based on Tsunami Inventories, Satellite Imagery and Inundation Zoning
View through CrossRef
Simulation models are used to calculate the tsunami wave propagation and ultimately the tsunami height at shoreline and run-up. In recent years, several researchers are working on improving the output of these simulations. Although it could be characterized as accurate, both the difficulty of collecting data and calculating sub-scenarios, the high number of factors controlling tsunami properties, and the fact that the output will only be for a very specific tsunami scenario, make this process difficult and time-consuming. Furthermore, a difficulty has been noted in disseminating the related information to the general public and its final acceptance by Civil Protection agencies for further implementation of relevant risk reduction measures as the results refer to the occurrence of a rare scenario without detailed indication of the possible impacts on individual coastal areas.In the context of this research, a new methodology for calculating coastal impacts from tsunami is presented. It groups a large number of scenarios of tsunami generation and evolution according to the final rup-up and aims to highlight the possible impacts on the coastal zone according to the tsunami intensity. It is based on the compilation of a tsunami inventory comprising historical and recent events that have affected the study area, without taking into account a single tsunami case. The proposed methodology results in the tsunami inundation zoning of the studied coastal area based on already generated events.Subsequently, using satellite imagery, a highly detailed analysis of significant buildings and critical infrastructure located within the inundated coastal zone is carried out along with a classification of the potential impacts into 5 main categories comprising: (i) moving objects, (ii) infrastructure, (iii) buildings, (iv) natural environment and (v) population, a classification proposed within the Integrated Tsunami Intensity Scale ITIS2012.This methodology can contribute to the adoption of measures to effectively mitigate tsunami impacts on the built environment, resilience and sustainability of coastal infrastructure, to the development of safer spatial and urban planning and to a precise estimation of economic losses from coastal inundation. In addition, it is an important tool for operational planning, in particular for the selection and operation of emergency sites in the coastal zone, the preparation of tsunami contingency plans, and the implementation of actions to increase the operational preparedness of Civil Protection agencies and the awareness of the general population and its special groups (students, volunteers, elderly and disabled people, etc.) about tsunamis and their impacts.
Copernicus GmbH
Title: Effective estimation of Tsunami Coastal Impacts based on Tsunami Inventories, Satellite Imagery and Inundation Zoning
Description:
Simulation models are used to calculate the tsunami wave propagation and ultimately the tsunami height at shoreline and run-up.
In recent years, several researchers are working on improving the output of these simulations.
Although it could be characterized as accurate, both the difficulty of collecting data and calculating sub-scenarios, the high number of factors controlling tsunami properties, and the fact that the output will only be for a very specific tsunami scenario, make this process difficult and time-consuming.
Furthermore, a difficulty has been noted in disseminating the related information to the general public and its final acceptance by Civil Protection agencies for further implementation of relevant risk reduction measures as the results refer to the occurrence of a rare scenario without detailed indication of the possible impacts on individual coastal areas.
In the context of this research, a new methodology for calculating coastal impacts from tsunami is presented.
It groups a large number of scenarios of tsunami generation and evolution according to the final rup-up and aims to highlight the possible impacts on the coastal zone according to the tsunami intensity.
It is based on the compilation of a tsunami inventory comprising historical and recent events that have affected the study area, without taking into account a single tsunami case.
The proposed methodology results in the tsunami inundation zoning of the studied coastal area based on already generated events.
Subsequently, using satellite imagery, a highly detailed analysis of significant buildings and critical infrastructure located within the inundated coastal zone is carried out along with a classification of the potential impacts into 5 main categories comprising: (i) moving objects, (ii) infrastructure, (iii) buildings, (iv) natural environment and (v) population, a classification proposed within the Integrated Tsunami Intensity Scale ITIS2012.
This methodology can contribute to the adoption of measures to effectively mitigate tsunami impacts on the built environment, resilience and sustainability of coastal infrastructure, to the development of safer spatial and urban planning and to a precise estimation of economic losses from coastal inundation.
In addition, it is an important tool for operational planning, in particular for the selection and operation of emergency sites in the coastal zone, the preparation of tsunami contingency plans, and the implementation of actions to increase the operational preparedness of Civil Protection agencies and the awareness of the general population and its special groups (students, volunteers, elderly and disabled people, etc.
) about tsunamis and their impacts.
Related Results
Zoning Report: Massachusetts
Zoning Report: Massachusetts
<div>
Massachusetts is facing a housing affordability crisis. Rising home prices and rents from Cape Cod to the Berkshires are pushing long-time residents out of their commu...
Tsunami Assessment and Evacuation Analysis Using Remote Sensing for Tianya District of Sanya City, China
Tsunami Assessment and Evacuation Analysis Using Remote Sensing for Tianya District of Sanya City, China
Tsunami is one of the world’s most dangerous marine disaster. In this paper, freely available remote sensing data are applied to study the hazard, vulnerability, and evacuation in ...
TSUNAMI HAZARD ZONE IN THE COASTAL OF PANGANDARAN REGENCY
TSUNAMI HAZARD ZONE IN THE COASTAL OF PANGANDARAN REGENCY
Pangandaran Regency is famous for its natural beauty and favorite tourist destination in West Java, but it also has the potential for earthquakes and tsunamis due to its proximity ...
Building resilient coastlines: A comprehensive physics-based tsunami hazard model for Aotearoa New Zealand
Building resilient coastlines: A comprehensive physics-based tsunami hazard model for Aotearoa New Zealand
Tsunamis have the potential to cause catastrophic damage to coastal communities. In Aotearoa New Zealand, where 3.5 million people reside within 5 km of the coast, the threat of ex...
COASTAL ENGINEERING 2000
COASTAL ENGINEERING 2000
*** Available Only Through ASCE ***
http://ascelibrary.aip.org/browse/asce/vol_title.jsp?scode=C
This Proceedings contains more than 300 papers pre...
IMAGERY IN JULIANNE MACLEAN’S THE COLOR OF HEAVEN
IMAGERY IN JULIANNE MACLEAN’S THE COLOR OF HEAVEN
Imagery is a mental picture imagined by a reader. This research discusses imagery that existed in Julianne MacLean's novel The Color of Heaven. The Color of Heaven is a novel that ...
Citraan Dalam Buku Puisi Tantrum Karya Adhan Akram
Citraan Dalam Buku Puisi Tantrum Karya Adhan Akram
The purpose of this research is to describe the visual imagery, auditory imagery, tactile imagery, olfactory imagery, gustatory imagery, and kinetic imagery found in the poetry boo...
Tsunami risk perception in Central and Southern Italy, 2021
Tsunami risk perception in Central and Southern Italy, 2021
<p>The tsunami risk perception survey is promoted by the Tsunami Alert Centre of the National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology, operating within the Italian Sy...

