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Natural disasters.....by John Russell

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Indian Express 17.12.2009

Natural disasters.....by John Russell

The Indian Express in association with The British Council presents another initiative ‘Learn English’. There will be a series of 36 articles appearing in the Quest page every Thursday. This is the 22nd episode in the series. There are also exciting prizes to be won. You can collect upto 26 articles and send them to us in a scrapbook format.

The best four entries will win:
* 2 Free Adult courses (For classes VIII to XII) of 32 hours’ duration.
* 2 Free Young Learners Courses (For classes IV to VII) of 16 hours’ duration.

The courses are offered only at The British Council English Language Teaching Centre, Delhi.

For more details on the courses please visit www.britishcouncil.org/india

Natural disasters take many different forms and can happen without warning. Earthquakes, floods, volcanoes, drought, typhoons and hurricanes are all natural disasters.

The earthquake of 26 December 2004 resulted in one of the worst natural disasters in living memory. It was a massive underwater quake and occurred in the Indian Ocean. This caused a huge tidal wave (a tsunami) to cross the Indian Ocean. It destroyed coastlines and communities and brought death and destruction to many people. Thousands of people were killed as the wave travelled miles across the ocean to distant beaches. Whole families were swept out to sea or drowned as the sea invaded the land. The survivors needed fresh water, food and shelter as well as medical help. People from all over the world gave money so that towns and villages can be rebuilt.

Why do earthquakes happen?
The surface of the earth has not always looked as it does today; it is moving continuously (although very slowly) and has done so for billions of years. This is one cause of earthquakes, when one section the earth (tectonic plate) collides with another. Scientists can predict where (but not when) this might happen and the area between plates is called a fault line. On one fault line in Kobe, Japan, in 1923 over 200,000 people were killed. However, earthquakes do not always happen on fault lines, which is why they are so dangerous and unpredictable.

Where do volcanoes happen?
Volcanoes happen where the earth’s crust is thin — lava, dust and gases burst out (erupt) from beneath the earth. They can rise into a massive cone shape — like a mountain — and erupt, or they can be so violent that they just explode directly from the earth with no warning. There are 1,511 ‘active’ volcanoes in the world. This means that they may still be dangerous. In 1985 the massive Colombian volcano Nevado del Ruiz erupted. The lava melted a glacier and sent tons of mud down the town of Armero below. Twenty thousand people died.

Can we predict earthquakes and volcanoes?
Natural disasters like volcanoes are often unpredictable. We do not know when they might happen, or even where they will happen. In the future, scientists may be able to watch and predict events before they happen. This could save many lives. In South America, scientists predicted the eruption of Popocatépetl. Tens of thousands of people were safely moved just before the biggest eruption of the volcano in a thousand years. No one was hurt.

What is the difference between a hurricane and a tornado?
Hurricanes are extremely strong storms and often happen in the Caribbean. They cause high winds, huge waves, and heavy flooding and can cover hundreds of miles across. In 1998, Hurricane Gilbert produced 160 mile an hour winds. It killed 318 people, and destroyed much of Jamaica. Tornadoes or ‘twisters’ are very strong spinning winds. They can move objects as big as a car and can blow buildings down. These are very common in West Africa and certain areas of the USA.

Can too much rain cause problems . . .
Floods happen in many countries after very heavy rainfall. When rain pours for weeks at a time, rivers overflow and people and property can either be trapped or simply washed away. Since 1998, more than 30 people have drowned in floods in Britain. Flooding in Bangladesh caused 1,300 deaths in 1989; another natural disaster. . . . and can too little?

Another kind of natural disaster is a drought. This happens when there is no water — when it doesn’t rain for a long time and rivers dry up. Plants, animals and even humans die as a result of drought, for we all need water to live. Many countries today suffer from drought. This causes crops to fail, animals to die and sadly, people to starve.

Which is the most dangerous natural disaster?
All the disasters mentioned above are very dangerous and continue to kill thousands of people each year, but they are nowhere near the most dangerous disaster to ever happen on earth. One type of event in the earth’s history has regularly killed millions of beings: asteroid impacts. About once every million years the earth is hit by a piece of rock and ice from space large enough to cause massive destruction (including earthquakes, volcanoes and ice ages) and sometimes to kill entire species. Sixty-five million years ago more than half the earth’s species were killed by such an impact (including all the dinosaurs).

Disasters on the earth may seem dangerous, but the biggest threat to humans is likely to come from space.

Vocabulary
Five words/phrases from the text:
* trapped: caught and unable to free oneself
* massive: enormous
* unpredictable: not foreseen
* glacier: a large mass of ice that has formed over many years
* starve: to die from lack of food

Exercise one
Vocabulary gap fill. Now use the five words/phrases to fill the gaps in the sentences below:
He suffered from a ………[1] heart attack and died.
She was an ………[2] child so we never knew what she was going to do next.
They saw penguins, polar bears and a ………[3] when they visited the North Pole.
The group was ………[4] in the mountains and had to be rescued.
In some countries people ………[5] because they cannot afford to buy food.

Exercise two
Comprehension: answer the five questions using information from the article:

1. What is a fault line?
2. How many volcanoes in the world can possibly erupt?
3. How were lives saved when Popocatépetl last erupted?
4. Where do hurricanes and tornadoes usually occur?
5. Why do droughts cause death in plants, animals and people?

English and culture
Lord Bryon commented that the English winter ends in July only to recommence in August. Byron was a poet and a leading figure in Romanticism. He was also famous for his extravagant living and numerous love affairs. In Britain complaining about the weather is a popular topic of conversation - is that true of your country?

Answers
Vocabulary

1. massive
2. unpredictable
3. glacier
4. trapped
5. starve

Comprehension
1. A fault line is the area between the plates that cover the earth
2. One thousand, five hundred and eleven
3. Lives were saved because scientists were able to predict the eruption and evacuate people
4. Hurricanes occur in the Caribbean and tornadoes occur in West Africa and some parts of the USA
5. Droughts cause death because all living things need water to live

Learn English with the British Council: www.learnenglish.org.uk

Last Updated on Thursday, 17 December 2009 11:38