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- dc.title
- The Chimney Demon
- dc.description
- A demon mask hangs from a brick chimney in New Brighton. Some of the bricks at the base of the chimney appear to have moved. The photographer comments, "Since the September earthquake brick chimneys have been tumbling down. I do not know if this was put up to ward off shaking of the chimney during earthquakes, but it seems to be working. This chimney has now been taken down at the end of March 2012 and replaced with a simple metal flue".
- Creator(s)
- Steven Taylor
- Date
- 9:56pm 4th January 2012
- Tags
- coffee, shaking
- dc.title
- People in Disasters Conference - Understanding Immediate Human Behaviour to the 2010-2011 Canterbury Earthquake Sequence: Implications for injury prevention and risk communication.
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A video of a presentation by Professor David Johnston during the fourth plenary of the 2016 People in Disasters Conference. Johnston is a Senior Scientist at GNS Science and Director of the Joint Centre for Disaster Research in the School of Psychology at Massey University. The presentation is titled, "Understanding Immediate Human Behaviour to the 2010-2011 Canterbury Earthquake Sequence, Implications for injury prevention and risk communication".
The abstract for the presentation reads as follows:
The 2010 and 2011 Canterbury earthquake sequences have given us a unique opportunity to better understand human behaviour during and immediately after an earthquake. On 4 September 2010, a magnitude 7.1 earthquake occurred near Darfield in the Canterbury region of New Zealand. There were no deaths, but several thousand people sustained injuries and sought medical assistance. Less than 6 months later, a magnitude 6.2 earthquake occurred under Christchurch City at 12:51 p.m. on 22 February 2011. A total of 182 people were killed in the first 24 hours and over 7,000 people injured overall. To reduce earthquake casualties in future events, it is important to understand how people behaved during and immediately after the shaking, and how their behaviour exposed them to risk of death or injury. Most previous studies have relied on an analysis of medical records and/or reflective interviews and questionnaire studies. In Canterbury we were able to combine a range of methods to explore earthquake shaking behaviours and the causes of injuries. In New Zealand, the Accident Compensation Corporation (a national health payment scheme run by the government) allowed researchers to access injury data from over 9,500 people from the Darfield (4 September 2010) and Christchurch (22 February 2011 ) earthquakes. The total injury burden was analysed for demography, context of injury, causes of injury, and injury type. From the injury data inferences into human behaviour were derived. We were able to classify the injury context as direct (immediate shaking of the primary earthquake or aftershocks causing unavoidable injuries), and secondary (cause of injury after shaking ceased). A second study examined people's immediate responses to earthquakes in Christchurch New Zealand and compared responses to the 2011 earthquake in Hitachi, Japan. A further study has developed a systematic process and coding scheme to analyse earthquake video footage of human behaviour during strong earthquake shaking. From these studies a number of recommendations for injury prevention and risk communication can be made. In general, improved building codes, strengthening buildings, and securing fittings will reduce future earthquake deaths and injuries. However, the high rate of injuries incurred from undertaking an inappropriate action (e.g. moving around) during or immediately after an earthquake suggests that further education is needed to promote appropriate actions during and after earthquakes. In New Zealand - as in US and worldwide - public education efforts such as the 'Shakeout' exercise are trying to address the behavioural aspects of injury prevention.
- Creator(s)
- David Johnston,
- Date
- 4:04am 26th February 2016
- Tags
- People in Disasters, conference, shaking, behaviour, injury, plenary, Professor David Johnston, Health and Wellbeing
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- My Photographic Visualisation of the Christchurch Earthquake
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- A motion-blurred photograph of houses, with the Port Hills in the background. The photographer comments, "This I hope gives you a feel of what it feels like in an earthquake. When you spend your whole life thinking that you and your home are built on solid ground, it can be quite a shock when you find it is not. You can feel the house shaking like a dog with a toy, rising up violently underneath you or the most gentle form which is when the ground moves gently like a wave moving under a rowing boat. It is not just the movement, you often get a rumbling sound which can precede a violent shake or can result in no movement at all. This means that some vehicles can sound like the rumbling initially and in the early days would get your heart racing. Another form of stress is when big excavators as heavy as a tank move as you can feel the ground shake from streets away, but you do not always hear the engine. For most of us the problem when the shaking starts, is wondering if this is the start of an extremely violent earthquake or will it peter out".
- Creator(s)
- Steven Taylor
- Date
- 8:52am 3rd September 2011
- Tags
- shaking, New Brighton, 4 September 2010
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- Vulnerability to Seismic Hazards in Coastal and Riverside Communities, map number 5
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- A flow chart depicting potential hazards earthquakes pose to coastal geography.
- Creator(s)
- Nick Brunsden
- Tags
- landslides, rock falls, ground motion, amplified ground shaking, liquefaction, tsunami, surface rupture, ground deformation, erosion, flooding, coastal plains, riverside areas, subsidence, sediment, waterways, lateral spreading, shoreline
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- The Strange Forces that Earthquakes Create
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- Liquefaction and buckled tarmac on a residential street in North New Brighton. The photographer comments, "In the February 2011 earthquake in Christchurch the kerb at the end of my road was pushed from both ends. This caused it to move away from the grass verge and push itself under the tarmac. The tarmac would normally have been 3 inches below the top of the kerb. Between the kerb and the grass can be seen the colour of the liquefaction that spewed out from the ground. The tarmac in the area seemed to flow downhill".
- Creator(s)
- Steven Taylor
- Tags
- kerb, tarmac, road, grass, gap, force, liquefaction, silt, pavement, North New Brighton, 22 February 2011, movement, shaking, flow
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- Do You Think It's Hungry?
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- A vehicle parked beside a broken streetlight in Parklands. The photographer comments, "This street light was shaken apart during the one of the double earthquakes on 23 December".
- Creator(s)
- Steven Taylor
- Date
- 1:27am 28th December 2011
- Tags
- 23 December 2011, shaking, street light, broken, Queenspark Drive
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- It Must Be Just Me
- dc.description
- A mock advertising sign reads "Coffee! Is the planet shaking or is it just me?".
- Creator(s)
- Steven Taylor
- Date
- 7:06am 3rd January 2012
- Tags
- coffee, shaking
- dc.title
- 12:51 February 22nd 2011
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- Digitally manipulated image of the damaged Cathedral of the Blessed Sacrament, superimposed with a seismograph trace. The photographer comments, "What we want to forget, but must remember".
- Creator(s)
- Steven Taylor
- Date
- 10:10am 11th April 2011
- Tags
- forget, remember, 22 February 2011, geonet, graph, Catholic, Cathedral of the Blessed Sacrament, seismic, shake, shaking, Basilica, 4 September 2010, 13 June 2011, powerful, strong, frightening, quake art, art