Natural Disasters
Overview
- Introductory Earth Science: minerals, rocks, rock cycle, plate tectonics, maps
- Natural disasters and risk to humans
- Tectonic disasters: volcanism, earthquakes
- Climatic disasters: global climate change effects, atmospheric circulation, storms, hurricanes, tornadoes, extreme weather, wildfires
- Water disasters: large waves, tsunamis, floods, coastal events
- Mass movements: falls, slides and flows, slope stability, subsidence
- Mass extinctions: impacts with space objects, climatic and chemical extinctions
- Lab topics to be selected from the following:
- Minerals and rocks
- Topographic maps
- Air photo and satellite imagery
- Earthquakes and seismograms
- Volcanic landforms and hazards
- Mass wasting landforms/hazards
- Rivers and flooding
- Groundwater contamination
- Coastal landforms and hazards
- Land use and site selection
Lectures may include in-class assignments or other active learning activities. Labs will include practical activities such as manipulation of samples, interpretation of datasets, and maps. Field trips, if offered, will involve spending time outdoors and travel to and from a ºÚÁϳԹÏÍøÆØÒ»Çø¶þÇø campus to a field site, usually on a Saturday.
Assessment will be in accordance with the ºÚÁϳԹÏÍøÆØÒ»Çø¶þÇø Evaluation Policy. The instructor will present a written course outline with specific evaluation criteria at the beginning of the semester. Evaluation will be based on the following:
Attendance / Participation | 0-5% |
Lecture assignments | 0-20% |
Project(s) | 0-20% |
Lab assignments | 9-15% |
Lab tests | 16-30% |
Term test(s) | 20-30% |
Final exam | 25-30% |
Total | 100% |
Upon successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- identify the geological and climatic factors and processes that affect natural hazards;
- describe how human activities interact with natural hazards;
- describe some important types of natural hazards, and the factors and processes causing the hazards;
- identify the landforms associated with important natural hazards, using topographic maps and visual/photographic methods;
- recognize the presence of natural hazards and suggest mitigation, prevention, or avoidance strategies.
Consult the ºÚÁϳԹÏÍøÆØÒ»Çø¶þÇø Bookstore for the latest required textbooks and materials. Example textbooks and materials may include:
Abbott, Patrick. (Current edition). Natural Disasters. McGraw Hill.
Marshak, Stephen. (Current edition). Natural Disasters. W.W.Norton.
Requisites
Prerequisites
None
Corequisites
None
Equivalencies
None
Course Guidelines
Course Guidelines for previous years are viewable by selecting the version desired. If you took this course and do not see a listing for the starting semester / year of the course, consider the previous version as the applicable version.
Course Transfers
These are for current course guidelines only. For a full list of archived courses please see
Institution | Transfer details for EAES 1122 | |
---|---|---|
There are no applicable transfer credits for this course. |