
Hazardous Seas
360 pages
6 x 9
89 figures
360 pages
6 x 9
89 figures
Edited by Louise K. Comfort and Harkunti P. Rahayu
Tsunamis are infrequent but terrifying hazards for coastal communities. Difficult to predict, they materialize with little warning, claiming thousands of lives and causing billions of dollars in damage. Recent mega-tsunamis in Japan and Indonesia claimed close to 250,000 lives, triggering wide-scale economic and social disruption. Developing countries cannot afford costly underwater cable systems, and governments and relief organizations have been forced to rely on flawed warning systems such as deep-sea buoys. Now, a groundbreaking new approach to tsunami detection and warning, which relies on low-cost underwater sensors and networks of smartphone communication, has changed the equation. Developed by an international, interdisciplinary team of researchers, this approach allows at-risk coastal communities to have an economically viable, scientifically sound means to protect themselves.
Coeditors Louise K. Comfort and Harkunti P. Rahayu, accomplished experts in disaster preparedness, contend that it will give communities precious additional minutes to communicate warnings about imminent tsunamis to residents, potentially saving many lives. Chapters authored by a close group of collaborators present the science behind this new approach, describing conceptual design, computational models, and real-time testing of a prototype system in the warm equatorial waters of Indonesia’s Mentawai Sea. Introductory chapters explain the sociotechnical approach—how undersea sensors can transmit data to a network of electronic devices on land to alert residents to impending tsunami threats in near-real time. Subsequent chapters explore what this might look like: assessing communities at risk; designing interactive information systems for communication during an emergency; designing wireless networks for smartphone communication that can guide residents to safety; and designing community-based shelters. The book concludes with a thoughtful analysis of how these sociotechnical advances might be used for all coastal cities at risk of tsunamis, sea-level rise, storm surges, and other hazards.
Hazardous Seas is an invaluable guide for policy makers and international NGOs looking to save lives from tsunamis and mitigate crippling damage to communities, and provides a comprehensive overview of tsunami detection and warning for students of engineering, computer science, planning, policy, and economic and environmental analysis.
"Hazardous Seas offers an innovative, tested approach to early detection and mitigation of tsunami risk by harnessing the science of underwater communication to advanced ocean engineering and electronic networks that function in disaster-degraded environments. The detailed chapters validate the links between science, technology, and community resilience. This book is invaluable not only to Indonesia, but to other countries that cope with rising seas and coastal hazards."
Idwan Suhardi, deputy minister of Ministry of Research and Technology, Indonesia
"Tsunamis are not an everyday occurrence, but when they happen close to populated regions the damage and loss of life can be tremendous. Tsunami warning systems that can alert coastal communities quickly and cheaply can save lives but have proved difficult to build until now. Hazardous Seas describes a novel system that will change the way we think about coastal disaster preparedness."
Thomas Heaton, Professor Emeritus of Engineering Seismology, Caltech
A Scientific Note
Foreword by Hammam Riza
Preface
Chapter 1. Building Community Resilience to Disaster Risk: A Sociotechnical Approach
Louise K. Comfort and Mark W. Dunn
Chapter 2. Community Networks for Tsunami Early Warning
Harkunti P. Rahayu and Louise K. Comfort
Chapter 3. A Reliable, Timely Communication Application to Enhance Tsunami Preparedness
Fuli Ai, X. Xerandy, Taieb Znati, Louise K. Comfort, and Febrin Anas Ismail
Chapter 4. Device-to-Device Communication: A Scalable, Socially Aware, Land-Based Infrastructure to Support Community Resilience in Disaster Events
X. Xerandy, Fuli Ai, Taieb Znati, Louise K. Comfort, and Febrin Anas Ismail
Chapter 5. Community-Based Shelters: Design, Construction, and Implementation
Febrin Anas Ismail and Abdul Hakam
Chapter 6. Enabling Adaptive Collective Action for Communities at Risk: Responding to Tsunami Risk in Padang City, Indonesia
Yoon Ah Shin, Louise K. Comfort, Fuli Ai, and Febrin Anas Ismail
Chapter 7. Wireless Networks for Disaster-Degraded Contexts: Tsunami Evacuation in Padang, Indonesia
Fuli Ai, X. Xerandy, Echhit Joshi, Taieb Znati, and Febrin Anas Ismail
Chapter 8. Real-Time Seafloor Tsunami Detection and Acoustic Communications
Lee Freitag, Keenan Ball, Peter Koski, James Partan, Sandipa Singh, Dennis Giaya, and Kayleah Griffen
Chapter 9. A Prototype Ocean Bottom Pressure Sensor Deployed in the Mentawai Channel, Central Sumatra, Indonesia: Preliminary Results
Emile A. Okal and Lee Freitag
Chapter 10. Underwater Sensor Network Prototype for Tsunami Detection and Warning: A Long Deployment Journey toward Functionality
X. Xerandy, Iyan Turyana, Lee Freitag, Wahyu Pandoe, Harkunti P. Rahayu, and Febrin Anas Ismail
Chapter 11. Indian Ocean Tsunami Warning and Mitigation System: Initiation, Evolution, and Implementation
Harkunti P. Rahayu
Chapter 12. Creating a Sustainable Learning System in Regions of Risk
Louise K. Comfort, Wahyu W. Pandoe, Harkunti P. Rahayu, and Iyan Turyana
Afterword
Acknowledgments
About the Editors
Contributors
Index
Presented by: Louise Comfort of the University of Pittsburgh and Lee Freitag of Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Tsunamis are infrequent but terrifying hazards for coastal communities. Difficult to predict, they materialize with little warning, claiming thousands of lives and causing billions of dollars in damage. Developing countries cannot afford costly underwater cable systems, and governments and relief organizations have been forced to rely on flawed warning systems such as deep-sea buoys. Now, a groundbreaking new approach to tsunami detection and warning, which relies on low-cost underwater sensors and networks of smartphone communication, has changed the equation. Developed by an international, interdisciplinary team of researchers, this approach allows at-risk coastal communities to have an economically viable, scientifically sound means to protect themselves. Learn about the science behind this new approach in this webinar with Louise Comfort and Lee Freitag. Discover how this new sociotechnical approach could alert residents to impending tsunami threats in near-real time and how the approach could apply to all coastal cities at risk of tsunamis, sea-level rise, storm surges, and other hazards. Hazardous Seas: A Sociotechnical Framework for Early Tsunami Detection and Warning.
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