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Are You Ready for Indonesia's Disasters?
- Don’t panic. Be aware that some earthquakes are actually foreshocks and a larger earthquake might occur.
- Minimize your movements to a nearby safe place.
- If you are indoors, stay there until the shaking has stopped and you are sure that exiting is safe.
- Drop to the ground, take cover by getting under a sturdy table or other piece of furniture and hold on until the shaking stops.
- If there isn’t a table or desk near you, cover your face and head with your arms and crouch in an inside corner of the building.
- Stay away from glass, windows, outside doors and walls and anything that could fall, such as lighting fixtures or furniture.
- Use a doorway for shelter only if it is in close proximity to you and if you know it is a strongly supported, load-bearing doorway.
- Stay inside until the shaking stops and it is safe to go outside.
- Research has shown that most injuries occur when people inside buildings attempt to move to a different location inside the building or try to leave.
- Be aware that the electricity may go out or the sprinkler systems or fire alarms may turn on.
- Do not use the elevators as they might stop and strand you.
- Stay there. Move away from buildings, streetlights and utility wires.
- The greatest danger exists directly outside buildings, at exits and alongside exterior walls.
- Ground movement during an earthquake is seldom the direct cause of death or injury.
- Most earthquake-related casualties result from collapsing walls, flying glass and falling objects.
- Stop as quickly as safety permits and stay in the vehicle.
- Avoid stopping near or under buildings, trees, overpasses and utility wires.
- Proceed cautiously once the earthquake has stopped.
- Avoid roads, bridges or ramps that might have been damaged by the earthquake.
- Do not light a match.
- Do not move about or kick up dust.
- Cover your mouth with a handkerchief or clothing.
- Tap on a pipe or wall so rescuers can locate you.
- Use a whistle if one is available.
- Shout only as a last resort. Shouting can cause you to inhale dangerous amounts of dust.
Tsunami.
- An earthquake is a natural tsunami warning.
- If you feel a strong quake, do not stay close to shore.
- If you hear of an earthquake, be aware of the possibility of a tsunami and listen to the radio or television for additional information.
- Remember that an earthquake can trigger killer waves thousands of miles across the ocean many hours after the event generated a tsunami.
- An approaching tsunami is preceded by an unusual fall or rise in the water level.
- If you see the ocean receding unusually rapidly, that’s a good sign that a tsunami may be on its way.
- Go to high ground immediately.
- A tsunami is a series of waves and the first wave may not be the most dangerous.
- The danger from a tsunami can last for several hours after the arrival of the first wave strikes.
- A tsunami wave train may come as a series of surges that are five minutes to an hour apart.
- The cycle may be marked by a repeated retreat and advance of the ocean.
- Stay out of danger until you hear it is safe.
- Use your common sense. If you feel or hear of a strong earthquake do not wait for an official tsunami warning.
- Tell your family and friends to join you in leaving for high ground.
Sources: US Federal Emergency Management Agency Web site, fema.gov, and National Geographic
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Sinabung Volcano Evacuees Complain of Illness, Stress
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Kabanjahe, Indonesia. Hundreds of the many thousands of people who have crowded into evacuation centers seeking protection from Mount Sinabung in North Sumatra have begun to complain of illness.
Swedish Tourist Falls Into Bali's Mount Batur Crater
Jakarta Globe, Made Arya Kencana, March 31, 2010
Rescue teams on Wednesday were racing to the scene of an accident after a Swedish tourist reportedly fell into the active crater of Mount Batur in Bangli district.
Daniel Petersen, 25, remains missing after he climbed the 1717-meter-high Mount Batur with two friends at 4 a.m. on Wednesday.
Bali's National Search and Rescue Agency (Basarnas) said they received report at 7:25 a.m from a guide identified as Komang that Petersen had fallen into the mountain's crater.
“We are still climbing to the crater,” Basarnas official Ketut Parwa said.
Basarnas was being assisted by police, paramedics and local volunteers.
Parwa said Petersen's friends survived and were waiting for the rescue team though evacuation efforts were being hampered by bad weather.
Mount Batur is about 90 minutes drive from the provincial capital, Denpasar. According to the Meteorology, Climatology and Geophysics Agency, it has erupted 26 times since 1840
When a Volcano Kills Quietly
Discovery News, By Michael Reilly | Mon Mar 15, 2010 03:21 PM ET
In June of 1996 New Zealand's Mt. Ruapehu erupted with violence. Its ash cloud blotted out the sun for miles, climbing almost 30,000 feet into the atmosphere. In all, some 7 million tons of rock and ash were ejected.

Yet no one was killed. At least, not within 60 miles of the volcano.
But in the cities of Auckland and Hamilton, hundreds of miles from Ruapehu, something strange happened. No warnings were sounded, and the skies appeared normal to the naked eye. But more people than usual started showing up at hospitals, many of them later dying of aggravated respiratory diseases.
A city of 1.3 million people, Auckland is 175 miles from the volcano -- that would seem to be a safe distance. But respiratory deaths there and in Hamilton were higher in 1996 than any other time that decade.
That's exactly the researchers' point. The scientists point out that all sorts of eruptions -- from Mt. St. Helens in 1980 to the epic Laki fissure eruption of 1783 in Iceland -- throw out loads of microscopic particles that are much more dangerous to people's lungs than the bits of ash we can see.
In fact, people further away from volcanoes may suffer worse exposure than those living right next to it, because small particles will initially go thousands of feet in the air and get carted away by wind.
If you're one of the 500 million people on Earth living with a 60-mile bulls eye of an active volcano, then you know you have a problem. What this research is saying is that if you live much further away, you may not be still be in trouble -- maybe worse trouble, because no one sees it coming. They write:
...the long-distance dispersal of diffuse fine volcanic ash and gaseous aerosols may pose a far more extensive health hazard than is generally perceived by medical and civic authorities. If so, people in many large cities, with limited or no awareness of this threat and no effective emergency procedures, may be at risk.
Image: Global Volcanism Program