Natural hazards


Hello friends, I'd like to exchange e-mails with folks who have used probabilistic or deterministic methods for risk assessment of geohazards. At this time, I am interested in investigations of karst and landslides hazards for onshore pipelines, especially vulnerability to geohazards and natural risk insurance. Thanks!
Reliability - Risk & Probabilistic Methods Landslides - Slope Stability Soil Mechanics / Geotechnical

Asked 18/12/2006 16:01, updated: 14/03/2017 14:07
Yolkin

3 Answers

Votes: 1

Rickydom

A natural hazard is a threat of a natural event that will have a negative effect on humans or the environment. An avalanche is an example of a current density is composed of granular materials. An earthquake is a phenomenon resulting from a sudden release of stored energy that emits seismic waves. A volcanic eruption is the point at which a volcano is active and releases its power, and the eruptions come in many forms.

Votes: 1

Cliffordsmith

Natural disasters are a threat to a naturally occurring event, will have a negative impact on people or the environment. Many natural disasters are interrelated, such as earthquakes can cause tsunamis and drought can lead directly to famine. A specific example of natural disasters between the Division and natural disasters are the San Francisco earthquake of 1906 was a disaster, but earthquakes are a hazard.

Votes: 1

Hgillhgill

Landslides are a threat to the onshore pipelines which consequently getting ruptured following the natural hazard. The rupturing further on causes the leakage of gas which gives way to the release of potentially hazardous substances in the atmosphere.