Impacts And Responses Flashcards
What are primary impacts?
Those that occur immediately following a volcanic eruption.
What are secondary impacts?
Those that occur in the days and weeks following an eruption.
What are the environmental impacts of a volcanic eruption?
• fires caused by lava flows and pyroclastic flows
• acid rain as a result of SO2 being released into the atmosphere
• release of CO2 from burning of plants
• aerosols released from eruption create a cooling effect (can stay in the stratosphere up to 3 years).
What are the social impacts of a volcanic eruption?
• food/water shortages due to crop damage and water supplies contaminated by ash fall
• people injured or killed by pyroclastic flows or increased CO2, causing suffocation.
• lahars injure and kill people
• psychological problems
• loss of shelter
• evacuation - malnutrition due to change in diet (leading to further deaths)
• Isolated communities more susceptible to disease after evacuation
What are the economic impacts of a volcanic eruption?
• lava and pyroclastic flows destroy roads and cause buildings to collapse
• lahars cause further destruction to roads and buildings, blocking emergency services, destroying businesses and causing high levels of unemployment.
What are the political impacts of a volcanic eruption?
• Conflict - caused by increased competition for resources (eg housing, food, water, medicine and aid)
• more extreme political parties emerging due to desperate and scared people
What are the short term responses of a volcanic eruption?
• evacuation of people at risk
• international aid
• deployment of emergency services
• aid from within the country sent to the area
What are the long term responses of a volcanic eruption?
• risk management
• alert systems
• storage of emergency food, water and aid supplies
• creation of hazard maps to evacuation
Define preparedness
The state of readiness for a volcanic eruption
Define mitigation
The action of reducing the severity or seriousness of a volcanic eruption
Define adaptation
The action of changing or adapting behaviour in order to reduce the severity of a volcanic eruption
List 6 ways of preparing for an eruption
• monitoring gas emissions
• ground deformation
• thermal monitoring
• satellite images and remote sensing
• mass movements and mass failures
• seismic activity
Describe monitoring gas emissions
• the main gas is sulphur dioxide
• an increase in gas quantity ca signal the start is volcanic activity
• gas levels drop rapidly in the few hours before an eruption
Describe ground deformation
• magma moving in the lithosphere can deform the ground above
• volcanoes swell prior to an eruption due to gathering of magma
Describe thermal monitoring
• magma movement and changes in gas release can alter temperatures
• magma heats up groundwater