Tsunami hazard and total risk in the Caribbean basin

Deadly western North Atlantic Ocean tsunami events in the last centuries have occurred along the east coast of Canada, the United States, most Caribbean islands, and the North Atlantic Coast of South America. The catastrophic Indian Ocean tsunami of 2004 reminded natural hazards managers that tsunam...

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Main Authors: Proenza, X. William, Maul, George A.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11141/770
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spelling ftfloridainsttec:oai:repository.lib.fit.edu:11141/770 2023-10-09T21:53:54+02:00 Tsunami hazard and total risk in the Caribbean basin Proenza, X. William Maul, George A. 2010-07 http://hdl.handle.net/11141/770 en_US eng Proenza, X. W., & Maul, G. A. (2010). Tsunami hazard and total risk in the caribbean basin. Science of Tsunami Hazards, 29(2), 70. 8755-6839 http://hdl.handle.net/11141/770 Copyrights, Reproduction, and Citations: Authors publishing in the SCIENCE OF TSUNAMI HAZARDS maintain the copyright of their intellectual property. Permission to use research articles or photographs from the Journal should be requested directly from the authors. Use of any materials published in the SCIENCE OF TSUNAMI HAZARDS should be appropriately acknowledged. Pertinent reference information should be provided for the article from which the material was reproduced. SCIENCE OF TSUNAMI HAZARDS is a CERTIFIED OPEN ACCESS Journal included in the prestigious international academic journal database DOAJ maintained by the University of Lund in Sweden with the support of the European Union. http://tsunamisociety.org/InstructionsAuthors.html Article 2010 ftfloridainsttec 2023-09-22T09:36:02Z Deadly western North Atlantic Ocean tsunami events in the last centuries have occurred along the east coast of Canada, the United States, most Caribbean islands, and the North Atlantic Coast of South America. The catastrophic Indian Ocean tsunami of 2004 reminded natural hazards managers that tsunami risk is endemic to all oceans. Total Risk is defined as hazard (frequency of tsunami events) times measures of elements at risk (human exposure) times measures of vulnerability (preparedness) in a given epoch (Nott, 2006). While the tsunami hazard in the Caribbean (averaging 19 ± 22 years between deadly events) is lower than Pacific coastal areas, the total risk to life and property is at least as high as the USA West Coast, Hawaii, or Alaska, because of the higher Caribbean population density and beach tourism so attractive to more than 35 million visitors a year. Viewed in this light, the allocation of resources by governments, industry, and insurers needs to be adjusted for the better protection of life, for coastal engineering, and for infrastructure. Article in Journal/Newspaper North Atlantic Alaska The Scholarship Repository of Florida Institute of Technology Canada Indian Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection The Scholarship Repository of Florida Institute of Technology
op_collection_id ftfloridainsttec
language English
description Deadly western North Atlantic Ocean tsunami events in the last centuries have occurred along the east coast of Canada, the United States, most Caribbean islands, and the North Atlantic Coast of South America. The catastrophic Indian Ocean tsunami of 2004 reminded natural hazards managers that tsunami risk is endemic to all oceans. Total Risk is defined as hazard (frequency of tsunami events) times measures of elements at risk (human exposure) times measures of vulnerability (preparedness) in a given epoch (Nott, 2006). While the tsunami hazard in the Caribbean (averaging 19 ± 22 years between deadly events) is lower than Pacific coastal areas, the total risk to life and property is at least as high as the USA West Coast, Hawaii, or Alaska, because of the higher Caribbean population density and beach tourism so attractive to more than 35 million visitors a year. Viewed in this light, the allocation of resources by governments, industry, and insurers needs to be adjusted for the better protection of life, for coastal engineering, and for infrastructure.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Proenza, X. William
Maul, George A.
spellingShingle Proenza, X. William
Maul, George A.
Tsunami hazard and total risk in the Caribbean basin
author_facet Proenza, X. William
Maul, George A.
author_sort Proenza, X. William
title Tsunami hazard and total risk in the Caribbean basin
title_short Tsunami hazard and total risk in the Caribbean basin
title_full Tsunami hazard and total risk in the Caribbean basin
title_fullStr Tsunami hazard and total risk in the Caribbean basin
title_full_unstemmed Tsunami hazard and total risk in the Caribbean basin
title_sort tsunami hazard and total risk in the caribbean basin
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/11141/770
geographic Canada
Indian
Pacific
geographic_facet Canada
Indian
Pacific
genre North Atlantic
Alaska
genre_facet North Atlantic
Alaska
op_relation Proenza, X. W., & Maul, G. A. (2010). Tsunami hazard and total risk in the caribbean basin. Science of Tsunami Hazards, 29(2), 70.
8755-6839
http://hdl.handle.net/11141/770
op_rights Copyrights, Reproduction, and Citations: Authors publishing in the SCIENCE OF TSUNAMI HAZARDS maintain the copyright of their intellectual property. Permission to use research articles or photographs from the Journal should be requested directly from the authors. Use of any materials published in the SCIENCE OF TSUNAMI HAZARDS should be appropriately acknowledged. Pertinent reference information should be provided for the article from which the material was reproduced. SCIENCE OF TSUNAMI HAZARDS is a CERTIFIED OPEN ACCESS Journal included in the prestigious international academic journal database DOAJ maintained by the University of Lund in Sweden with the support of the European Union.
http://tsunamisociety.org/InstructionsAuthors.html
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