DRRR Reviewer
DRRR Reviewer
DRRR Reviewer
- PANGEA - All earth’s continent were once combined in one super continent
- ALFRED WEGENER – He proposed the continental drift theory
- VOLCANOES - An opening in earth’s crust that allows molten rock, gases, and debris to escape
to the surface
- CONTINENTAL DRIFT - The movement of continents resulting from the motion of tectonic
plates
- EARTHQUAKE - A sudden and violent shaking of the ground
- TYPHOON - A giant, rotating storm that brings wind, rain, and destruction
- PLATE TECTONICS - The theory that earth’s outer shell is divided into large slabs of solid
rocks, called “plates,” that glide over earth’s mantle
- MOUNTAIN - It is an elevated portion of the earth’s crust
- EPICENTER - It is the point where an earthquake or underground explosion originates
- CONTINENTS - Is a large continuous mass of land conventionally regarded as a collective
region
DISASTERS OF OUR DAILY LIVES
- Relationship Problems
- Financial Problems
DISASTER
- a natural or manmade emergencies that cannot be handled by affected communities who
experience severe danger and incur loss of lives and properties causing disruption in its social
structure and prevention of the fulfillment of all or some of the affected community’s essential
function.
- a serious disruption of the functioning of a community or a society involving widespread human,
material, economic or environmental losses and impacts which exceeds the ability of the affected
community or society to cope using its own resources.
EMERGENCY
- Any situation in which life or well-being of a community will be threatened unless immediate and
appropriate action is taken, and which demands an extraordinary response and exceptional
measures.
HAZARD
- Any phenomenon that has a potential to cause disruption or damage to humans and their
environment.
EXPOSURE
- People or properties which are directly affected by natural disasters
VULNERABILITY
- Factors in the community that allow a hazard to cause a disaster.
- Factors that increase the susceptibility of a population to the impact of hazard
FACTORS OF VULNERABILITY
- Physical / Material
- Social/ Organizational
- Economic
- Environmental
DISASTER READINESS
- Also known as “disaster preparedness” refers to measures taken to prepare for and reduce the
effects of disasters.
DISASTER REDUCTION
- Disaster reduction is a systematic approach to identify, assess, and reduce the risk of disaster.
CAPACITIES
- Positive resources and abilities which are helpful to individuals, families and community in
mitigating, preparing for, responding to and recovering from the hazard impact
DISASTER RECOVERY
- It is an area of security planning that aims to protect an organization from the effects of
significant negative events.
HAZARD
- Anything that can cause harm
- Something that has the potential to harm you
RISK
- How great the chance that someone will be harmed by the hazard
- The likelihood of a hazard to causing harm
HOW CAN A HAZARD BE A DISASTER?
DISASTER RISK
- Is expressed as a function of hazard, exposure, and vulnerability
- It seeks not only express the chance of disaster but also to quantify the impact.
𝑓(ℎ𝑎𝑧𝑎𝑟𝑑 𝑥 𝑒𝑥𝑝𝑜𝑠𝑢𝑟𝑒 𝑥 𝑣𝑢𝑙𝑛𝑒𝑟𝑎𝑏𝑖𝑙𝑖𝑡𝑦)
- Disaster risk = 𝐶𝑜𝑝𝑖𝑛𝑔 𝐶𝑎𝑝𝑎𝑐𝑖𝑡𝑦
- ELEMENTS: Hazard, Exposure, Vulnerability, and Coping Capacity
MAGNITUDE OF DISASTERS DEPENDS ON:
1. Severity of the natural event
2. Quantity of exposure of elements at risk
3. Vulnerability level or quality of exposure
FACTORS THAT CONTRIBUTE TO THE DISASTERS IN THE PHILIPPINES
1. Geographic and Geologic setting
2. Poverty
3. Education
4. Climate change
5. Human induced and environmental changes
DISASTER REHABILITATION
- A response strategy for creation of sustainable livelihoods. It encompasses support strategies
that are geared towards the restoration of human-centered services and infrastructure, as well
as the restoration of the physical and ecological integrity of the affected ecosystem.
ORIGIN OF AN EARTHQUAKE
- The outermost and thinnest layer of the Earth is the crust, which tends to crack, the reason for the
presence of tectonic plates.
- The boundaries of the tectonic plates are where most earthquakes occur.
- Volcanic Earthquake - is produced by the rising movement of magma beneath volcano.
- Tectonic Earthquake – is produced by the sudden movement of rocks along faults and plate
boundaries.
- Tectonic plate movements produce most earthquakes, but some are caused by natural events such
as volcanic eruptions and meteor impacts.
- An earthquake originates at the focus or hypocenter, a point inside the earth where the
earthquake begins.
- The point on earth’s surface directly above the focus is called the epicenter, often the greatest
damage can be experienced near the epicenter.
ANATOMY OF AN EARTHQUAKE
- Fault – A fracture in the rocks that make up the earth’s crust
- Epicenter – The point at the surface of the earth directly above the focus
- Focus (Hypocenter) – The point within the earth where an earthquake rupture starts
- Plates – Massive rocks that make up the outer layer of the earth’s surface, and whose movement
along faults trigger earthquakes
- Seismic Waves – Waves the transmit the energy released by an earthquake
EARTHQUAKE HAZARDS
- Earthquake hazards include any physical phenomenon associated with an earthquake that may
produce diverse effects on human activities.
- Earthquake pose little direct danger to people, most earthquake hazards come from man-made
structures and the shaking that they receive from the quake.
- The real danger is being crushed inside a collapsing building, drowning in a flood, getting buried
in landslide, or being burned in a fire.
- is a series of waves in a water body caused by the displacement of a large volume of water right
after an earthquake. These waves move toward shores and inland at a high speed.
Sinkholes
- are depressions or holes in the ground caused by some form of collapse of the surface layer
mostly cause by dissolution of surface soil and rocks due to ground shaking
Landslides
- is the movement of rocks, earth, or debris down a sloped section of land after the shaking of the
ground
Subsidence
- is the sudden sinking or gradual downward settling of the ground’s surface with little or no
horizontal motion.
Fire
- results from the destruction of electrical, gas, and chemical installations during an earthquake