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- This website was developed
in May 2005 by students of Geography 378 (International
Environmental Problems and Policy) at the University of Wisconsin-Eau
Claire, to examine the short-term and long-term effects of the Indian
Ocean tsunami that devastated coastal regions of South and Southeast
Asia on Sunday morning, December 26, 2004.
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- Generally, a tsunami
happens when an earthquake
generates large seismic waves in an ocean or sea, which can travel
great distances. Past
tsunamis have previously hit populated regions of the world,
but this tsunami hit a densely populated coastal region that was
particularly vulnerable to damage. The affected region included
Indonesia, Thailand,
Sri Lanka, India,
and several other
countries (including Somalia on the other side of the ocean),
where up to 300,000 people were killed and more than 5 million people
affected (including 1 million people made homeless).

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- Our study is in the
context of global
environmental justice, or the ecological implications of social
and economic inequalities between rich and poor countries, and
between the rich and poor (or the powerful and the powerless)
within countries. Although the earthquake and resulting tsunami
were natural phenomena, there was nothing "natural"
about the extent of the disaster that followed. The tsunami and
its aftermath is a case study of how so-called "natural"
disasters can have "unnatural" effects in poorer
regions, stemming from manmade social causes such as poor housing
and vulnerable subsistence economies. For example, the Pacific
Ocean warning system can warn Pacific Rim countries of an
approaching tsunami, but the poorer countries of South and Southeast
Asia were not able to afford a similar Indian
Ocean warning system. Plans are now underway to implement
such a system.
Tsunami
Deaths by Nationality

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Tsunami
Travel Time (each color band = 1 hour) Click
for larger map
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The approaching tsunami
was detected in advance by some land-based wildlife,
such as elephants, though aquatic life could not escape the destructive
waves. Some indigenous
peoples used their traditional ecological knowledge to predict
and escape the tsunami. But most communities were not so prepared
or lucky, and face dire environmental, economic and social consequences
in the tsunami's aftermath.
Most immediately,
freshwater supplies
were contaminated with seawater, making the population susceptible
to diseases.
Many fishing
villages and fleets were wiped out, and lost their fisherfolk
at sea. Agriculture
was devastated not only by the force of the waves, but by the
salinization of farm fields and the destruction of transportation
links to markets. Coastal wetlands
and timber resources were also catastrophically affected,
reducing their ability to buffer the coast from future tsunamis.
The ability of many coral
reefs and low islands to sustain inhabitants may be particularly
in jeopardy.

Recovery will come in
stages. Since December, the region and the world has supplied relief
and aid to the victims, and has begun to undertake the enormous
task of clean-up
of the damage and debris. An even more gargantuan task will be the
long-term reconstruction
of the coastal communities, in a way that does not ignore the subsistence
needs of small fishers and farmers, or their need for environmentally
sustainable development.
An important element
of recovery will be to attract new tourism,
which has dropped since foreign tourists suffered mass casualties
in the tsunami, and the Western media focused much attention on
their plight. Another element of recovery may be to use the disaster
as an opportunity to settle the wars
for independence of the Tamils in Sri Lanka and the Acehnese in
Indonesia.
Tsunami recovery is
also a test for the rest of the world. As the attention of the U.S.
and the world is diverted by other disasters and wars, can it sustain
the recovery of the tsunami-devastated region, in a way that narrows
rather than increases the gap between rich and poor?

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Thanks to previous
Geography 378 students who produced the class websites Water
is Life (2004), Iraq
& Our Energy Future (2003), and Caspian
Basin Alert (2002). Thanks also to the U.W. System's Teaching
Technology Today for printing Professor Zoltan Grossman's
article describing this Geography 378 project: "Class
Websites Contribute to Environmental Awareness."
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Geography
378 students, Spring 2005
| Nate
Beaver |
T.
J. Helgeson |
Clare
Peter |
| Brandon Cramer |
Rod Kouba |
Megan Ring |
| Courtney Daniels |
Kate Krisik |
Lindsey Springer |
| Jen Devries |
Fabio Lee Perez |
Hannah Stoffs |
| Nikki Engel |
Brigham Leslie |
Mikel Szyman |
| Bryan Frenz |
Hannah Lott |
Justin Van Ness
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| Vanessa Helland |
Thong Moua |
Carly Wickhem |
| Renae Haug |
Garett Pankrantz |
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Tsunami
links
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This website can
be most easily read in Explorer, with the Matura MT Script Capital
font for titles. The opinions expressed on this website are
those of the students or their research sources, not of all
Geography 378 students, the instructor, or of the University
of Wisconsin-Eau Claire and its departments. We hope the class
website project contributes to the knowledge and debate around
this environmental issue of global consequence.
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