4 posts tagged “earthquake”
Pandas need help too! We helped China value their Pandas by our love for them...
Panda habitat damaged by China quake
Tue Jun 17, 8:39 PM ET
BEIJING - At least 80 percent of the habitat for giant pandas in China's earthquake-hit province was destroyed or damaged, a forestry official said Tuesday.
China's May 12 temblor centered in Sichuan devastated a vast area of wild habitat for endangered species, including the giant panda, Cao Qingyao, a spokesman for the State Forestry Administration, told reporters.
"We still cannot reach some of the local habitats, so it's impossible to assess the exact losses," Cao said.
The endangered panda is revered as a national symbol in China, where about 1,600 pandas live in the wild, mostly in Sichuan and the neighboring province of Shaanxi. Another 180 have been bred in captivity.
Forty-nine nature reserves, including the popular Wolong Nature Reserve, were damaged throughout Sichuan, Cao said, making up 2 million acres. The facility, which used to house 64 pandas, was badly damaged by the quake and one panda died.
The center remains closed to visitors, and might not open again until next year. Six pandas have been sent to another reserve in Sichuan, and eight have been sent to Beijing for an Olympics stay at the Beijing Zoo that was planned before the quake.
The earthquake also badly damaged forestry resources in the affected areas, Cao said. Direct economic losses to the forestry business were $3.3 billion and 232 forestry workers were killed, he said.
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Terrible! Hope US will help with aid as requested. We have amazing technology to find and rescue trapped people.
BBC video HERE
'Buried teenagers crying for help' |
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The Chinese authorities have launched a major rescue operation in Sichuan province, after it was struck by the most powerful earthquake to hit the south-west of the country in 30 years. More than 8,500 people are feared dead, while many thousands more may be buried beneath collapsed buildings or injured, state media have reported. The 7.8 magnitude earthquake on Monday afternoon was felt across a huge swathe of Asia, causing buildings to sway as far away as Beijing and Bangkok. Those closest to its epicentre, 92km (57 miles) north-west of the provincial capital Chengdu, have told of their shock and described the immediate aftermath. Casper Oppenhuisdejong, who works for a Dutch company in the city of 10 million, told the BBC there were initially a series of minor tremors. "All of a sudden I felt minor shocks and within seconds everybody was up. It was getting more and more intense, everybody ran out," he said.
"We were in quite a narrow street where everything just started shaking. All the alarms of the cars around went off, all the windows you heard smashing into each other," he added. "Entire buildings were being evacuated, people were panicking, especially since the phones didn't work. It was mayhem. Traffic got jammed, it was very surreal." An employee of Sichuan's seismological bureau told China's state-run Xinhua news agency that he had been driving near the epicentre when the earthquake struck. "The road started swaying as I was driving. Rocks fell from the mountains, with dust darkening the sky over the valley," he said. Aftershocks Gilles Barbier, who was staying in Chengdu at the time, told the BBC there was no major damage to buildings, but that aftershocks were causing concern.
Gilles Barbier: 'It was very scary' "In the past two hours, I think every 20 minutes, 30 minutes, we can feel the ground shaking." Ronen Medzini, an Israeli student, told the Associated Press by text message that power and water supplies and communications had been severely disrupted. "Traffic jams, no running water, power outs, everyone sitting in the streets, patients evacuated from hospitals sitting outside and waiting," he said. Collapsed school In the nearby city of Dujiangyan, which was closer to the epicentre, desperate efforts are under way to find survivors underneath the rubble of a three-storey school building which collapsed, burying an estimated 900 students.
Reporters from Xinhua said local residents and rescue workers were pulling people out of the rubble of Juyuan Middle School as anxious parents looked on. "Some buried teenagers were struggling to break loose from underneath the ruins while others were crying out for help," Xinhua reported. Gao Shangyuan, a local resident helping with the rescue effort, told Xinhua he had run out of his house when the earthquake had struck and saw some students escape before the building collapsed. "Some had jumped out of the window and a few others ran down the stairs that did not collapse," he said. Two girls said they managed to escape because they had "run faster than the others", Xinhua added. "It was around 2:30 pm, and the building suddenly began to rock back and forth," one of them said. Are you in the area? Did you feel the earthquake in your country? If you have any information you would like to share with the BBC you can do so using the form below or text your experiences to: +44 7624 800 100 You can send pictures and video to: yourpics@bbc.co.uk or text them to +44 7725 100 100 If you have a large file you can upload here.Click here to see terms and conditions or go to this address: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/talking_point/ 2780295.stm#yourpics At no time should you endanger yourself or others, take any unnecessary risks or infringe any laws. | |||||
Indonesia was created when two land masses collided, creating what is now the Indonesia archipelago. A history of recent earthquakes in Indonesia HERE
Asia gets back online after quake
Posted by MikeyMike at 08:47 pm on January 5th, 2007 in Geographica, Tech.
I'm still hearing about peeps having bandwith problems in Asia... How's YOUR situation right now? What have heard from your friends? I sure can't send mp3s to several peeps I know right now....

An Internet surfer in Singapore fails to gain Internet access Wednesday.
POSTED: 9:27 p.m. EST, December 28, 2006
TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) -- Telecom
companies quickly cobbled together new telephone and Internet networks
on Thursday as Asia began recovering from a Taiwanese earthquake that
snapped undersea cables, snarling service across the tech-savvy region.
Less than 48 hours after the powerful quake ruptured the two crucial cables off Taiwan's southern tip, companies from South Korea to Singapore said they managed to partially restore most of their service to millions of customers.
They did it by rerouting traffic through satellites and cables that weren't damaged by the 6.7-magnitude tremor that killed two people.
Four repair ships were sailing to the quake zone, but they weren't expected to arrive until Tuesday, said Lin Jen-hung, vice-general manager of Chunghwa Telecom Co., Taiwan's biggest phone company.
The crews would need to find the fault, survey the conditions and pull up the cables for repair -- a job Chunghwa said could take two weeks.
Most international Internet data and voice calls travel as pulses of light through hundreds of undersea fiber optic cables crisscrossing the globe. The cables -- clusters of glass fibers enclosed in protective material -- are often owned by groups of telecom companies, who share costs and capacity.
"Cables break all over the place, from sharks nibbling, anchors dragged across," said Markus Buchhorn, an information technology expert at Australia National University.
But Buchhorn added the broken cables become a problem if -- like in the Taiwanese case -- several snap at the same time and there are not immediate backup lines to keep the traffic flowing.
Chunghwa estimated its revenue loss from the earthquake damage at about $3 million. Repairing the cables would cost about $1.53 million, the company said in a filing to the Taiwan Stock Exchange.
The outage reminded stock traders, travelers and online video gamers how addicted they've become to the Internet.
"Many lost the opportunity to make fast money," said Francis Lun, general manager at Fulbright Securities in Hong Kong.
"I haven't experienced anything like this before," Lun added. "We've become too dependent on these optic fibers -- a few of them get damaged, and everything collapses." More Here
