Frontiers in Built Environment | |
An Analysis of Fatality Ratios and the Factors That Affected Human Fatalities in the 2011 Great East Japan Tsunami | |
Makinoshima, Fumiyasu1  Hasegawa, Natsuki1  Day, Simon2  Suppasri, Anawat3  Latcharote, Panon3  Imamura, Fumihiko3  | |
[1] Department of Civil Engineering, Graduate School of Engineering, Tohoku University, Japan;Institute for Risk and Disaster Reduction, University College London, UK;International Research Institute of Disaster Science (IRIDeS), Tohoku University, Japan | |
关键词: The 2011 Great East Japan tsunami; Human casualty; fatality ratio; Building damage; Ishinomaki city; | |
DOI : 10.3389/fbuil.2016.00032 | |
学科分类:建筑学 | |
来源: Frontiers | |
【 摘 要 】
This study presents a new analysis of spatial variation in fatality ratios in the 2011 Great East Japan tsunami, in order to overcome the limitations of previous studies that tended to underestimate the fatality ratios. In addition, this analysis was performed in a manner that allows the results to be compared to those from analyses of fatality ratios in other historical tsunamis. To do this, it uses population and fatality data at the village scale in areas of less than 3 km2 where the inundation ratio was greater than 70%, rather than the lower-resolution data used in previous studies. The median value of the tsunami inundation depth at each location was extracted at the original 5-m grid resolution. All of the data were obtained from the Reconstruction Support Survey Archive. Based on the results, a strong correlation between the fatality ratio and inundation depth was found only in some areas of the Sendai Plain, whereas no strong correlation was observed along the Sanriku ria coastline. Fatality ratios in Sanriku were likely related not only to the force of the tsunami but also to other factors, such as the ria topography and the populationâs experience of past historical tsunamis. Data from other tsunamis in regions where tsunamis frequently occur also indicate that historical tsunami experience is a key factor in reducing fatality ratios. In contrast, the Sendai Plain shows smaller variation in local tsunami amplification effect compared to that of the Sanriku ria coastline, as well as fewer coastal defence structures. Therefore, the fatality ratio in that region was predominantly affected by the force of the tsunami and the residentsâ individual characteristics. On the Sendai Plain, Ishinomaki City exhibited a strong correlation between the fatality ratio and inundation depth, as well as between fatality ratio and building damage because its low evacuation ratio meant that many fatalities occurred in victimsâ homes. Therefore, the fatality ratio in Ishinomaki City was higher than those in other areas at the same inundation depth. Simple empirical formulas were developed for estimation of human fatalities based on inundation depths and building damage ratios.
【 授权许可】
CC BY
【 预 览 】
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RO201904028209138ZK.pdf | 3398KB | download |