Short title
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Natural hazards impacts on technosphere
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Oral presentation Date/Room/Chair
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May 25 AM1 (09:00 - 10:45)
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203
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Hajime Matsushima
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May 25 AM2 (11:00 - 11:45)
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203
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Hajime Matsushima
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Poster presentation Date/Room
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May 25 (Core Time 18:15 - 19:30)
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Convention Hall
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Contact
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ELENA PETROVA
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Email
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epgeo@mail.ru
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Convener
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ELENA PETROVA
/ Hajime Matsushima
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Scope
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The last decade set a sad record in the number and scale of natural disasters and clearly demonstrated high vulnerability of human society and technosphere to their impacts. The most serious consequences have the so-called natural-technological disasters that have place when natural hazards trigger accidents at technological objects such as nuclear power plants, chemical plants, oil refineries and pipelines, etc. One of the most large-scaled natural-technological disasters occurred on March 11, 2011 in Japan as a result of a massive 9.0-magnitude earthquake off the northeast coast of Honshu Island that caused a more than 30-meter tsunami. A distinctive feature of natural-technological events, such as of the 2011 Tohoku earthquake, is their multihazard and synergistic nature with a disaster impact on the technosphere, resulting in simultaneous occurrences of numerous technological accidents. It is very difficult to deal with the consequences of such natural-technological accidents and disasters, because one has to cope not only with the primary aftermaths of the natural disaster itself, but also with the secondary effects of a number of technological accidents, which can be much more serious. These consequences are the more severe the higher are the population density and concentration of industrial facilities and infrastructure (especially hazardous and vulnerable objects) in disaster-affected areas. The main goal of this multidisciplinary session is to summarize case studies of relationships between natural hazards and technological disasters, their social and economic consequences; and to encourage a discussion about tools and methods to prevent disasters and to minimize their consequences.
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Notes
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Time |
Presentation No |
Title |
Author |
Presenter |
Abstract |
Oral Presentation May 25 AM1 (09:00-10:45) 203 to the top
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09:00 - 09:30
|
Invited
HDS07-01
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Policy developments in Ecosystem- based Disaster Risk Reduction (Eco-DRR) and Climate Change Adaptation
|
FURUTA, Naoya
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FURUTA, Naoya
|
|
09:30 - 10:00
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Invited
HDS07-02
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Debate of ecosystem-based disaster risk reduction in Moune District, Kesennuma City after the 2011 Tsunami Disaster
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ICHINOSE, Tomohiro
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ICHINOSE, Tomohiro
|
|
10:00 - 10:30
|
Invited
HDS07-03
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Reconstruction of Okushiri Island after the Tsunami Disaster of 1993, from a Disaster Risk Reduction Perspective
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YAMAMOTO, Kiyotatsu
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YAMAMOTO, Kiyotatsu
|
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10:30 - 10:45
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HDS07-04
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Coastal plants restoration project conducted by citizens on sandy coast at the disaster stricken area of East Japan
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MATSUSHIMA, Hajime
SUZUKI, Akira
SONDA, Satoshi
other
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MATSUSHIMA, Hajime
|
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Oral Presentation May 25 AM2 (11:00-11:45) 203 to the top
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11:00 - 11:15
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HDS07-05
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The difference of vegetation formation and radioactivity accumulation due to different estuary forms
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NOHARA, Seiichi
KOREHISA, Kaneko
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KOREHISA, Kaneko
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|
11:15 - 11:30
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3-min talk in an oral session (HDS07-P01/HDS07-P02)
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Presentation No |
Title |
Author |
Presenter |
Abstract |
Poster Presentation May 25 Core Time (18:15-19:30) Convention Hall to the top
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Invited
HDS07-P01
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A narrative-based study on migrants behavior and response to disasters: 2011 Tohoku Earthquake and the Filipino students
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ROBLES, Lisette
ICHINOSE, Tomohiro
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ROBLES, Lisette
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Invited
HDS07-P02
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Impact of knowledge for understanding of haiku composed by the earthquake
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AOKI, Yoji
FUJITA, Hitoshi
KUMAGAI, Keisuke
other
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AOKI, Yoji
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HDS07-P03
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INTERRELATION OF NATURE AND SOCIETY
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VIKULINA, Marina
VIKULIN, Alexander
PETROVA, Elena
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VIKULINA, Marina
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|