East Baton Rouge Parish Library

Earthquake, Andrew Robinson

Label
Earthquake, Andrew Robinson
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 192-208)
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Earthquake
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
788269832
Responsibility statement
Andrew Robinson
Series statement
Earth series
Summary
Los Angeles and Tokyo, Instanbul and Beijing, Lima and Cairo are among the more than 60 large cities at definite risk from an earthquake. Although European cities seem less vulnerable, devastating earthquakes have hit Athens, Bucharest, Lisbon, Madrid, Rome and Naples, among others, over the past three centures. Even London experienced a shock in 1884 that sopped MPs in the Houses of Parliament in their tracksThis book describes two millennia of major earthquakes and their effects on societies around the world; the ways in which culture shave mythologized earthquakes through religion, the arts and popular culture; and the science of measureing, understanding and trying to predict earthquakes. According to Charles Darwin, a great earthquake in Chile in 1835 was the single most interesting event of his entire five-year journey around the globe on HMS BeagleDespite advances in both science and engineering, and improved disaster preparedness, earthquakes continue to cause immese loss of life and damage. The Haiti earthquake of 2010 took some quarter of a million lives. No one will ever forget the catastrophic tsunami unleashed in 2011 by a magnitude-9 earthquake off the east coast of Japan - a crisis described by Japans' prime minsiter as the most disastrous nationa l event since the atomic bomb strikes in 1945. Tokyo was largely unaffected in 2011, unlike in 1703, 1855 and 1923 when earthquakes ravaged the capital. How ling will it be bfoe the next big Tokyo earthquake? Written by a highly experienced science writer, journalist and scholar, Earthquake will appeal as much to general readers of popular science as it will to experts in many fields -- P. [2] of cover
Table Of Contents
Earth-shattering events -- Lisbon, 1755: the wrath of God -- Seismology begins -- Tokyo, 1923: Holocaust -- Measuring earthquakes -- Faults, plates and drifting continents -- Caifornia: the enigma of the San Andreas fault -- Prediction of the unpredictable -- Designing against death
resource.variantTitle
Earthquake, nature and culture
Content
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