Hazard and risk assessment from Hurricane Ivan (2004) in Grenada using Geographical Information Systems and remote sensing


Autoria(s): Khalid, Fakhar; Babb, Renee
Data(s)

2008

Resumo

Hurricanes are destructive storms with strong winds, intense storm surges, and heavy rainfall. The resulting impact from a hurricane can include structural damage to buildings and infrastructure, flooding, and ultimately loss of human life. This paper seeks to identify the impact of Hurricane Ivan on the aected population of Grenada, one of the Caribbean islands. Hurricane Ivan made landfall on 7th September 2004 and resulted in 80% of the population being adversely aected. The methods that were used to model these impacts involved performing hazard and risk assessments using GIS and remote sensing techniques. Spatial analyses were used to create a hazard and a risk map. Hazards were identied initially as those caused by storm surges, severe winds speeds, and flooding events related to Hurricane Ivan. These estimated hazards were then used to create a risk map. An innovative approach was adopted, including the use of hillshading to assess the damage caused by high wind speeds. This paper explains in detail the methodology used and the results produced.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://gala.gre.ac.uk/2198/1/KhalidF2008_0020.pdf

Khalid, Fakhar and Babb, Renee (2008) Hazard and risk assessment from Hurricane Ivan (2004) in Grenada using Geographical Information Systems and remote sensing. Journal of Maps Student Edition. pp. 4-10. ISSN 1755-2958

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

Journal of Maps

Relação

http://gala.gre.ac.uk/2198/

http://journalofmaps.com/student/08_12_Khalid.pdf

Direitos

cc_by_nc_nd

Palavras-Chave #GE Environmental Sciences
Tipo

Article

PeerReviewed