Norman Pongracz:
Nature’s strange game
What happened? I still remember those days in spring, those strange times. I think of the noise of workers, the apparently scared people, who lived on the bank of the river Bodrog. This time of the year was always special in Sarospatak, my home town; this part of the year was the flood season. Groups of people, helpful volunteers gathered, and started to build an obstacle on the two sides of the river, to prevent the frightening mass of water flowing, and drowning the city.
Everybody was very optimistic, the people thought in general, that we can avoid letting the water ruin our homes, in other words we can prevail against the nature. However, in the row of floods we had every spring, we
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The countries held conferences all over the world, summoning the best of the scientist, to solve the increasing problems of climate change. Kyoto Protocol was born in Japan, to prevent the increase of carbon dioxide, which was considered to be the main cause of the global warming. Some nations however considered this as a threat to the stability to their economy, so they rejected it, making this project a less successful policy. However this was only the first big step; that humanity has done to handle the problems of climate-change.
In some ways politics and science did great effort, to create the sustainable growth concept, they just had forgotten to act in favor of this new ideology; in the recent years we have not seen anything important to happen, and conditions were getting worse. News from all over the country and the world were indicating that nature’s strange game is changing our future and society. As I said earlier: we felt that while the past was about the humanity, the future was in the hand of the planet and the environment.
The seasons had been becoming more and more extreme in the past few years: the summer’s sun is burning down the forest, the winter’s snow is freezing the country to the bones, and we cannot find any ease during the spring and fall. The older people are sensitive to extreme
At the end of Bell Street, McKay Street, Mayo Street, there was the Flood. It was the Wawanash River, which every spring overflowed its banks. Some springs, say one in every five, it covered the roads on that side of town and washed over the fields, creating a shallow choppy take. Light reflected off the water made every- thing bright and cold, as it is in a lakeside town, and woke or revived in people certain vague hopes of disaster. Mostly during the late afternoon and early evening, there were people straggling out to took at it, and discuss whether it was still rising, and whether this time it might invade the town. In general, those under fifteen and over sixty-five were most certain that it would.
The China floods of 1931 is known as possibly the worst natural disaster of all time. The 1931 Chinese floods were a series of horrible floods that decimated China and lasted around three months. The death toll ranges from one hundred and forty-five thousand to four million people and floods were estimated to have affected over twenty eight million people. Large amounts of people drowned during the flood but some died from waterborne diseases. The cause for the floods were many independent variables which combined to create a dramatic flood that came to China overnight. This natural disaster could have actually been averted if proper flood control measures had been put in place and followed.
Death tolls increase like an escalator going up as the flood gets worse. Bodies form twisted positions as they whip with the current of the water. The nature of this disaster makes people do things that they wouldn’t normally do. Well, you can say some people that is. In the story “Bounty” by Diane Cook, the remaining people alive in the catastrophic, potential life-ending flood are faced with challenges of survival. The main character, his neighbor and Gary all show some compassion during the hard times. Disasters happen everyday as much as we might not think about it or believe it. Whether it’s from nature such as tornados, hurricanes, and wild fires or even from people. People are just as dangerous and unpredictable. They can cause
The American Red Cross team had 50 volunteers to help lead by Clara Barton. It was a major diester it overflowed all the dams and got into people’s house and destoryed their values. May 31st it was already flooding
The water did not go over the dan but through it because dan could not contain the water that is why water was going over it. As the structure had become soft and it could not support the charge of water and then the structure gave up. There had an explosion in the dan, and most of people in Buffalo Creek were surprising by the flood, the disaster had took so many life, and the houses were gone. The people of Buffalo Creek did not know what they could do to save their loved ones, because the flood was so strong people did not have even the change to evacuate their stuff and even though their loved ones. The flood carried away the entire small village of Sanders with the wave, and the buildings houses, and the structure alike carried with the way. The bodies of people were on the top of water and there had a lot dead bodies everywhere in Buffalo Creek, but despite there had a lot of dead bodies and there had also some serious injuries for those who survived in during the flood. The government had to do something for the people of Buffalo Creek, and department of Housing and Urban Development had to provide housing for the people and giving them the
Just hours after we arrived, the waters rose, drowning the docks outside the dome where we stood. We ran to help the kids with disabilities, trying to help them to areas where we could find running water, the only thing needed for survival at the time. We did eventually find it, and were able to supply the civilians with water, but the running water stopped, and we once
Imagine living your life on a regular day for you and BOOM! Your life is now suddenly completely changed, everything you thought was normal or part of you has changed. This is what natural disasters tend to make happen in your life, they affect us in many ways. In this essay i will discuss the various elements each author uses to express the causes and effects of disasters. The author Jacqueline Adam clearly expresses the causes and effects of disasters through the use of text structure, choice of vocabulary and use of data and details.
First, when it comes to floods, we think of the destruction, death, and especially the maintenance of the economy. Each of us know the significant amount of destruction mother nature has, causing floods, storms, earthquakes etc. Whenever natural fiascos ensue, we try very hard to resist them. It’s a tragic time for everybody. It makes you feel depressed.
Not even Noah of the Ark could have prepared for the imposing amount of water on my already heavily-saturated carpets. Some expect that a scaled-down ocean within one's bedroom would become a sizeable hindrance in their life’s. On the contrary, postponing the much-needed waterproofing of our house was the direct catalyst for the independent adult I am today. The flood damaged a majority of my possessions, left my room dangerous and smelling of mold, and devastated what I called home, but it couldn't have been a better illustration of a blessing in disguise.
While natural disasters such as floods, drought and hurricanes are commonly thought to occur due to environmental forces such as weather, climate and tectonic movements; a deeper investigation into the ‘disaster’ displays other contributing forces. Human factors have a large, if not equal, contribution to the occurrance and outcome of such disasters (Pelling, 2001). As Pelling (2001) argues, there is both a physical and human dimension to ‘natural disasters’. The extent to which the natural occurrence of a physical process, such as a flood or earthquake, impacts on society is constructed by that society, creating a ‘disaster’ as measured by a
In this week application, I will pay attention to natural disaster (floods) and school based crisis situations. Floods refer to an overflow of water from a water body due to excessive rainfall or input in water from its source exceeding the usual capacity of the water body. The over whelming flow of water is catastrophic leading to destruction of infrastructure, plants as well as causing loss of life to both animal and human beings. Flood may occur slowly while in cases of flash flood, they occur instantly within a short duration of minutes.
Scientists across the globe are being funded to research the effects of climate change. Why, some may ask. Not only does climate change affect the world around you, it affects you directly. Whether it be through air, land, or sea, the human population is not overlooked by nature. Every single person on this planet is faced with climate change symptoms on a regular basis. The focus of this paper however will be solely on how the climate change is changing weather patterns and natural climates to create more frequent, large tropical storms and increased costal flooding. These storms and flooding are often a concern for hundreds of millions of people worldwide (typically costal dwellers), with a multitude of health risks involved with them. A storm or two here and there may not feel like a problem, but when we look and find global patterns there is no denying this is not natural.
Global climate change has positive and negative effects on marine and terrestrial ecosystems. The cause of global climate change is said to be because carbon dioxide is being emitted through the large scale burning of oil, coal and gas, with an additional contribution coming from clearing of tropical forests and woodlands which results in wildlife life destruction. The carbon dioxide traps heat from the sun in the earth's atmosphere and prevents it from being sent back out into space. The heat that stays trapped in the atmosphere causes the global temperature to increase. Globally, average temperatures are expected to increase between 1.5 to 6.1 degrees Celsius in the next hundred years.
There is widespread agreement in the scientific community that the climate is changing and it has likely received contributions from humans in the form of increased carbon emissions. The Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has stated that there is ninety percent certainty that human activity has been the primary cause of temperature rises seen since 1950; if the climate rises by more than two degrees Celsius, scientists predict dire consequences to be faced by humans and the world (McMichael and Lindgren, 2011, p. 402). Changes in climate, no matter how small, bring with it changes in other seemingly unrelated aspects of life. As current research suggests, climate change will have negative effects on
Climate change is caused mainly by increase of human activity and industrialisation. For example, activities such as driving cars, farming, burning coal and cutting down forests produce greenhouse gases – mainly carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide which are emitted into the atmosphere, which create a layer of greenhouse gases around the earth and trap the sun 's heat.