GSTDTAP  > 地球科学
Why Super Typhoon Haiyan was so deadly
admin
2018-11-05
发布年2018
语种英语
国家美国
领域地球科学
正文(英文)
A boy sits next to wooden crosses during a memorial ceremony marking the first anniversary of Super Typhoon Haiyan at a mass grave in the village of Vasper

When Super Typhoon Haiyan struck in 2013 it was the disaster-prone Philippines' worst storm on record, with 7,350 people dead or missing.

Several factors caused the staggering death toll:

Strongest storm

With gusts exceeding 305 kilometres (190 miles) per hour at first landfall, Haiyan was the strongest ever to hit land at the time. Typhoons more commonly reach peak velocity while still travelling over oceans.

The powerful front drove a giant wall of seawater called a , estimated to be 7.5 metres (24.6 feet) high, into coastal towns like Tacloban, a city of 240,000 people.

Overall, Haiyan tore across a group of with a combined area the size of Portugal.

Low-lying islands

The Philippines is the first major landmass on the Pacific Ocean's typhoon belt. A wall of mountains on the coast of the main island of Luzon dampens some of the blows, but the smaller, flatter islands—such as those that lay in Haiyan's path—are more exposed.

Much of Tacloban sits less than five metres above sea level. The town and others nearby were defenceless against the surge that funnelled through a shallow bay sandwiched between Leyte and Samar islands.

Inadequate warnings

Even though the hardest-hit areas received early warnings, the weather service and other officials later admitted that the victims were unfamiliar with the term "storm surge".

The last deadly storm surge in Tacloban had hit in 1887, more than a century before Haiyan. In a country with scores of regional languages, the government also did not have local terms to be able to communicate the phenomenon to everyone.

After the disaster, the government agency worked with linguists to craft simpler meteorological terms to ensure the danger posed by typhoons, floods, landslides and other adverse events would be fully understood by all.

Extreme poverty

In a nation where one in five people earn less than two dollars a day, the people in Haiyan's path stood out for their deep poverty. Many of the victims built their homes on the islands' narrow coastal plains and lived off subsistence fishing and farming.

Haiyan destroyed or damaged 1.14 million houses, many of them made of cheap, flimsy materials that stood no chance against nature's wrath.

Failure to evacuate

The national government, through a geohazard mapping programme begun in 2006, had flagged most of the areas that were prone to the impacts of natural disasters.

However, local governments failed to evacuate many of the vulnerable population away from the danger zones, partly because they did not fully appreciate the threat and partly because they had not built enough shelters.

In the town of Hernani on Samar island, where Haiyan made the first of many landfalls, several families were wiped out by a storm surge when they left their flimsy shacks to ride out the storm at a low-lying school built along the coast, neighbours told AFP.

Explore further: Five years after Typhoon Haiyan, scores still in harm's way

URL查看原文
来源平台Science X network
文献类型新闻
条目标识符http://119.78.100.173/C666/handle/2XK7JSWQ/127998
专题地球科学
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
admin. Why Super Typhoon Haiyan was so deadly. 2018.
条目包含的文件
条目无相关文件。
个性服务
推荐该条目
保存到收藏夹
查看访问统计
导出为Endnote文件
谷歌学术
谷歌学术中相似的文章
[admin]的文章
百度学术
百度学术中相似的文章
[admin]的文章
必应学术
必应学术中相似的文章
[admin]的文章
相关权益政策
暂无数据
收藏/分享
所有评论 (0)
暂无评论
 

除非特别说明,本系统中所有内容都受版权保护,并保留所有权利。