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Title: The%201999%20Venezuelan%20Flood


1
The 1999 Venezuelan Flood
  • Presented
  • by
  • Tibi Marin
  • KDHE/KSU

2
DEDICATED TO THE PEOPLE OF VENEZUELA WHO LOST
THEIR LIVES IN THE 1999 VENEZUELAN FLOOD
3
MAP OF VENEZUELA
4
Information about Venezuela
  • Officially Republic of Venezuela
  • Estimated Population 21,005,000
  • Surface Area 352,143 sq mi (912,050 sq km)
  • Venezuela has a coastline 1,750 mi (2,816 km)
    long on the Caribbean Sea in the north.
  • It is bordered on the south by Brazil, on the
    west and southwest by Colombia, and on the east
    by Guyana.
  • Dependencies include Margarita Island, Tortuga
    Island, and many smaller island groups in the
    Caribbean.
  • The capital and largest city is Caracas.

5
INTRODUCTION
  • Landslides have caused major socioeconomic
    impacts on people, their homes and possessions,
    industrial establishments, and lifelines, such as
    highways, railways, and communications systems.

6
  • Socioeconomic losses due to slope failures are
    great and apparently are growing as the built
    environment expands into unstable hillside areas
    under the pressures of expanding populations and
    urban development.

7
  • Human activities disturb large volumes of earth
    materials in construction of buildings,
    transportation routes, canals, and communications
    systems, and thus have been a major factor in
    increases in damages due to slope failures, and
    increasing the extent of natural disasters such
    as the 1999 Venezuelan Flood.

8
Topography of the Area in Study
  • Venezuela is extremely steep and rugged. The
    crest of the Sierra de Avila reaches 2,700 m
    within about 6-10 km of the coast. The rivers and
    streams of this mountainous region drain to the
    north and emerge from steep canyons onto alluvial
    fans before emptying into the Caribbean Sea. In
    Vargas little relatively flat area is available
    for development with the exception of the
    alluvial fans.

9
Nature of geologic event
  • An unusually wet period in 1999 resulted in
    rainfall accumulation at sea level on the
    Caribbean coast of 293 mm for the first 2 weeks
    of December, followed by an additional 911 mm of
    rainfall from December 14 to 16 (MARN, 2000).

10
  • Fifteen days of constant and intense rainfall in
    Venezuela culminated on 16 December 1999 in
    extensive flooding and massive landslides in
    seven northern states of the country.
  • Rivers overflowed their banks and swept through
    poor districts in the capital city of Caracas.

11
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12
THE FLOOD
  • The disaster started when torrential rains
    triggered landslides that crashed down from Mount
    Avila, a mountain separating Caracas from the
    Caribbean coast.
  • The floods affected the South American country's
    entire northern coast, stretching from the
    tourist resort Margarita Island to the western
    Zulia state bordering Colombia.

13
Nature of geologic event
  • The mountain soil had been weakened by the
    removal of vegetation through deforestation
    caused by urban development and migration from
    other nearby countries. (shantytowns )

14
  • The heavy rainfall caused massive flooding and
    debris flows in the channels of major drainages
    that severely damaged coastal communities along
    the Caribbean Sea.

15
  • In coastal valleys, mud slides buried most of the
    towns of Macuto and Caraballeda while the towns
    of Los Corales, Camuri Chico and Carmen de Uria
    totally disappeared under avalanches of mud.

16
GEOLOGIC MAP OF VENEZUELA
17
  • On December 15 and 16, 1999, landslides (mostly
    debris flows) and flash floods along the northern
    coastal zone of the state of Vargas and
    neighboring states in northern Venezuela killed
    an estimated 30,000 people (USAID, 2000), caused
    extensive property damage, and changed hillslope,
    stream channel and alluvial fan morphology.

18
  • These shantytowns and resorts had been developing
    in the dry riverbeds and on steep unstable
    hillsides outside the larger city as part of a
    wide-scale population shift from farming regions
    to urban areas, especially those migrating from
    countries such as Colombia, Ecuador, Peru and
    others in search for better jobs.

19
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20
DEBRIS FLOW IN THE AFFECTED AREA
21
  • According to the national government, the
    partial figures on the disaster in the country
    are projected as follows
  • Persons affected 331,164
  • Persons left homeless 250,000
  • Disappeared persons 7,200
  • Deaths 50,000
  • Housing units affected 63,935
  • Housing units destroyed 23,234

22
  • Within this region the Venezuelan Geological
    Survey and the Ministry of Ambient and Natural
    Resources characterized geologic conditions where
    landslides initiated on hillsides and examined
    the texture of debris-flow deposits in the
    channels of nine drainages.

23
  • Boulders up to 5 m long were carried along by
    the flows, impacted structures causing serious
    damage, and were deposited on the fan.

24
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25
  • The volume of debris-flow and flood deposition on
    the fan was measured to be about 2 million cubic
    meters.
  • The total volume of material transported and
    deposited by landslides throughout the Vargas
    region ranks this as one of the most severe
    historical erosional events worldwide.

26
  • Large populations live on or near alluvial fans
    in locations such as Los Angeles, California,
    Salt Lake City, Utah, Denver, Colorado, and
    lesser known areas such as and Vargas, Venezuela.

27
  • A combination of debris flows that transported
    massive boulders, and flash floods carrying
    extremely high sediment loads were the principal
    agents of destruction
  • On virtually every alluvial fan along the Vargas
    coastline, rivers incised new channels into fan
    surfaces to depths of several meters, and massive
    amounts of new sediment were disgorged upon fan
    surfaces in quantities of up to 15 metric tons
    per square meter.

28
  • Sediment size ranged from clay and sand to
    boulders as large as 10 m in diameter. Sediment
    and debris including massive boulders were
    deposited up to several meters thick across large
    sections of alluvial fans in Camuri Grande and
    Caraballeda

29
  • The states of Zulia, Falcón, Yaracuy, Sucre,
    Anzoátegui and Nueva Esparta were also affected,
    but in less degree.
  • The fact remains, however, that the environmental
    hazards of disease transmission are heightened,
    and epidemic outbreaks are possible, which makes
    it necessary to assign priority to
    epidemiological and environmental surveillance so
    that proper sanitary measures may be taken.

30
EPIDEMIOLOGICAL REPORT
  • The epidemiological and environmental information
    was analyzed to determine the effects on health
    and the needs for allocation of resources.
  • The states hardest hit by the disaster were
    Vargas and Miranda. The effects on the Federal
    District (D.F.) was also considered owing to its
    geographic contiguity to them and to the fact
    that it shares their population dynamics and
    similar geololgical makeup

31
  • The following factors operate in the
    transmission of diseases in the wake of a
    disaster
  • The diseases already present in the population
    prior to the disaster and their endemic and
    epidemic levels.
  • The environmental changes caused by the disaster.
  • Population shifts.
  • Damage to public facilities.
  • Shortcomings in surveillance and in
    disease-control programs.
  • Changes in the resistance of individuals to
    diseases.

32
  • Diseases already present in the population
  • The danger of an epidemic in the wake of a
    disaster is a function of the preceding endemic
    and epidemic levels of diseases in the
    population.
  • The recurrently most important diseases are the
    diarrheas, dysentery from different causes,
    measles, airway infections, meningococcal
    meningitis, intestinal parasitoses, scabies and
    other dermatoses, tuberculosis, and malaria.

33
  • Predisaster situation of the leading
    endemo-epidemic diseases in Venezuela Malaria
    the cumulative reported incidence in the country
    in 1999 was below that of 1998.
  • In the six epidemiological weeks prior to the
    disaster incidence was on the rise. The entire
    country was affected, and the states at greatest
    risk for this disease were Zulia, Vargas, Sucre,
    Portuguesa, Miranda, Falcón, Barinas, and the
    Federal District. The situation was aggravated by
    the presence of hemorrhagic dengue.

34
Environmental changes brought about by the
disaster
  • These changes could alter the possibilities for
    the spread of diseases, the most important of
    which are the vector-borne (mainly mosquitoes)
    and the water-borne.
  • Floods heighten the risk of leptospirosis.
    Inadequate collection of solid wastes leads to
    the multiplication of flies as a physical vector
    for diarrheas and conjunctivitis.

35
  • The water supply is reportedly greatly
    compromised in the states of Vargas and Miranda,
    and water disinfection is a high priority for the
    prevention of water-borne outbreaks (diarrheas,
    including cholera).
  • In building a scenario for the effects on the
    health of the population in the short and middle
    run, it is also necessary to take account of the
    outbreaks of diseases in the wake of natural
    disasters among them leptospirosis, typhoid,
    food poisoning, minor infections of the airways,
    diarrheas, cholera, and malaria.

36
  • MITIGATION
  • Because most of the coastal zone in Vargas
    consists of steep mountain fronts that rise
    abruptly from the Caribbean Sea, the alluvial
    fans provide practically the only flat areas upon
    which to build.
  • Rebuilding and reoccupation of these areas
    requires careful determination of hazard zones to
    avoid future loss of life and property.

37
  • ACTIVITIES TO BE CARRIED OUTFOR MITIGATION OF
    RISK FACTORS
  • 1. Internal cleaning of buildings
  • Mud removal
  • Rubble removal
  • Removal of unserviceable articles
  • 2. Cleaning of surroundings and common areas.
  • Removal of mud from streets and avenues.
  • Removal of rubble from streets and avenues.

38
  • 3. Collection and final disposal of wastes.
  • Sanitary landfills.
  • Spillways.
  • Incineration.
  • 4. Health surveillance and education
  • Framing and circulation of directives.
  • 5. Provision to the community of reliable access
    to drinking water.

39
  • 6. Repair of the drinking water distribution
    system.
  • 7. Health surveillance and education.
  • 8. Ensuring that foods supplied to disaster
    victims are in wholesome condition.
  • 9. Sanitary evaluation of establishments that
    process foods and dispense them to the community.

40
Conclusions
  • In Venezuela, the extremely steep, tectonically
    active Cordillera de la Costa forms the boundary
    with a tropical sea.
  • Easterly trade-winds can force moist air masses
    upslope and precipitate large rainfall volumes,
    creating conditions for high-magnitude debris
    flows and flash floods such as the one in 1999.

41
  • This example from Venezuela shows the potential
    for extreme loss of life and property damage
    where a large population occupies an alluvial
    fan Without careful planning of human
    settlements, the impacts of these types of
    disasters are likely to increase in the future.

42
  • By building communities and other infrastructure
    on alluvial fans, dramatic natural hydrologic
    processes have been changed into major lethal
    events such as the ones in California,
    Venezuela, Peru, Colombia, Chile, Panama, Kansas.

43
REFERENCES
  • MARN, 2000. Informe Preliminar Sobre los
    Aspectos Ambientales Vinculadas al Desastre
    Natural Ocurrido en Venezuela Durante el Mes de
    Diciembre de 1999.
  • Wieczorek, G. F., B. A. Morgan, and R. H.
    Campbell, 2000. Debris-Flow Hazards in the
    Blue Ridge of Central Virginia. Environmental
    Engineering Geoscience, 6(1) 3- 23.

44
  • Garner, H.F., 1959. Stratigraphic-Sedimentary
    Significance of Contemporary Climate and Relief
    in Four Regions of the Andes Mountains.
    Geological Society of America Bulletin 70(10)
    1327-1368.
  • El Nacional. Venezuelan Newspaper El-Nacional.com
  • El Universal. Venezuelan Newspaper.
    El-Universal.com.
  • CNN.COM
  • www.fema.gov

45
Report of the Flood in Caraballeda, Venezuela.
(Debris-Flow Deposits and Contours of Maximum
Boulder Size on the Caraballeda Fan,
Venezuela) Wieczorek, G.F., Larsen, M.C., Eaton,
L.S., Morgan, B.A. and Blair, J. L. U.S.
Geological Survey MARN, 1999, Cronica
Cartografica de la Catastrofe de Venezuela
Ministerio del Ambiente y de los Recursos
Naturales (MARN), Servicio Autonomo de Geografia
y Cartografia Nacional, 15 p. MARN, 2000,
Comison ambiental para la evaluation y
tratamiento intergral de las cuencas torrenciales
del Estado Vargas, Informe de advance Marzo,
2000, 43 p.
46
  • Pierson, T.C., and Costa, J.E., 1987, A rheologic
    classification of subaerial and sediment-water
    flows, in Costa, J.E., and Wieczorek, G.F., eds.,
    Debris flows/avalanches  Process, recognition
    and mitigation  Geological Society of America,
    Reviews in Engineering Geology, v. 7, p. 1-12.
  • Salcedo, D.A., 2000, Los flujos torrenciales
    catastróficos de Diciembre de 1999, en el estado
    Vargas y en Caracas Características y lecciones
    apprendidas. Memorias XVI Seminario Venezolano de
    Geotecnia, Caracas. p. 128-175.
  • Schuster, R.L., Salcedo, D.A., and Valenzuela,
    L., in press, Catastrophic landslides of South
    America, S. Evans and J. DeGraff, eds., Reviews
    in Engineering Geology, v. 14, Geological Society
    of America, pp.
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