Autor: |
Massey, Chris I., Thomas, Kristie-Lee, King, Andrew B., Singeisen, C, Taig, T, Horspool, Nick A. |
Rok vydání: |
2019 |
DOI: |
10.21420/g2dd2q |
Popis: |
The aim of this research was to quantify the vulnerability of people and dwellings to the types of landslide hazards affecting Wellington and other parts of New Zealand. This research comprised two main objectives: 1. Investigate what landslide intensity metric(s) best correlate with the different consequences such as economic loss and/or physical damage state; and 2. Develop appropriate correlations/relationships between the preferred hazard intensity metric(s) and consequence type. In this study, vulnerability is defined as the degree of loss to a given element or set of elements within the area affected by a hazard. It is expressed on a scale of 0 (no loss) to 1 (total loss). Vulnerability has been evaluated by observing the relationships between: a. The characteristics of the element(s), which may make them susceptible to damage from a natural hazard; b. the hazard magnitude or intensity, such as the height, velocity, kinetic energy or pressure of the landslide debris on impact with the element(s) exposed to the hazard; c. as well as the consequence of the element(s) being impacted by the hazard, which is expressed as damage or loss. (auth) |
Databáze: |
OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |
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