Jump to content

Earthquake documentaries on History Channel this week


Recommended Posts

Hey, just thought I'd spread the word this week every night at 10pm there is a documentary about "big quakes". Last night was 1964 Alaska. Friggin scary it was. Tonight is Chile (?). Then 3 more nights.

 

History Channel, 10pm if you're interested.

Link to post
Share on other sites

There was a short 'special' on Japanese TV the other night about the next Tokai/Nankai earthquake. First it will shake everything like a bastard, knocking moving shinkansens off their tracks, spraying glass and cladding from the skyscrapers, and collapsing the old shitamachi buildings. Then everything will catch fire, including the 400 or so petrol storage tanks in the bay. Next the tsunami will come roaring into the bays, inundating the coastal nuclear power stations and releasing clouds of carcinogenic steam.

 

"Itsudemo okitemo okashikunai", they kept saying. Roughly translated as "It won't be very funny whenever it happens". \:D Yes, I think so.

Link to post
Share on other sites

This study seems pretty scary.

 

Tokyo rated most vulnerable city in world to disasters, attack.

 

Wednesday, January 12, 2005 at 07:26 JST

BERLIN — Tokyo, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Miami lead a world list of urban areas that could suffer catastrophic losses in lives and property from earthquakes, flooding, tsunamis or terrorism, the world's largest reinsurance company said in a report Tuesday.

 

Megacities, with 10 million or more inhabitants, "are exposed to all the classic risks, but their exposure and vulnerability are disproportionate," Munich Re wrote in a special study published Tuesday.

 

"They create risks of new dimensions — megarisks. Conurbations in coastal areas could be threatened by tsunamis, for example. Tokyo and Miami are instances of megacities in areas with major earthquake and hurricane exposures respectively," said board member Stefan Heyd.

 

Munich Re urged governments and urban planners to take disaster risks more fully into account when approving sites for development, and to take more preventive measures.

 

Munich Re gave Tokyo the top rating on its list of vulnerable megacities, saying it combined huge population with vulnerability to volcanic eruption, earthquakes, tropical storms, tsunamis and flooding.

 

With a risk index of 710, the greater Tokyo area and its 35 million inhabitants were far ahead of No. 2, the San Francisco Bay area, which rated 167, mainly due to Tokyo's high risk of multiple disasters, its huge population and roughly 40% share of the country's economy.

 

Los Angeles rated 100. The U.S. cities were rated riskier than more heavily populated areas such as Mexico City — also at high risk of earthquakes — because the amount of economic loss was judged to be potentially greater.

 

The study was prepared for a U.N. conference on disaster reduction Jan 18-22 in Kobe — which suffered what the report said was the most expensive natural disaster ever, a 1995 earthquake that took 6,000 lives and caused some $100 billion in damage.

 

Munich Re has been documenting and analysing natural disasters for the past 30 years and publishes an authoritative annual "natural catastrophe" report at the end of each year. (Wire reports)

Link to post
Share on other sites

I am just watching one of those "loud" "sensationalism" talent-strewn "documentaries" on the tv called "The next big earthquake is coming" or something as serious as that. The set the talent are sitting on is basically a representation of destroyed Tokyo.

 

This one guy - and he seemed pretty valid amongst all the hype - said that he predicted the Niigata one because of the volcanoes and "quiet period" for earthquakes in the region just before it. Said that the Tokyo one is on it's way in +-5 years. (So that'll be plus I presume)

 

It has had it's interesting moments, but I wish they'd get rid of the constant "movie music" and huge words like "YOU'RE GOING TO DIE!" on the screen every few minutes.

 

\:\(

Link to post
Share on other sites
×
×
  • Create New...