hunza river disaster

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A disaster happening that you’ve never heard of…. Six months ago, on January 4th, 2010 in the remote Hunza River Valley of northern Pakistan, a massive landslide buried the village of Attabad, destroying 26 homes, killing 20 people, and damming up the Hunza River. As the newly-formed lake grew, authorities rushed to evacuate and supply those affected in the landslide area and upstream. The lake is now over 300 feet deep and 16km (10 mi) long, submerging miles of highway, farms and homes. Earlier this week, the lake reached the top of the natural dam, and began to spill out - rapid erosion of the landslide debris has authorities worried about a potential breach, and locals have been evacuated as officials monitor the developing situation.

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A disaster happening that you’ve never heard of…Or maybe some of you have...Six months ago, on January 4th, 2010 in the remote Hunza River Valley of northern Pakistan, a massive landslide buried the village of Attabad, destroying 26 homes, killing 20 people, and damming up the Hunza River. As the newly-formed lake grew, authorities rushed to evacuate and supply those affected in the landslide area and upstream. The lake is now over 300 feet deep and 16km (10 mi) long, submerging miles of highway, farms and homes. Earlier this week, the lake reached the top of the natural dam, and began to spill out - rapid erosion of the landslide debris has authorities worried about a potential breach, and locals have been evacuated as officials monitor the developing situation.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Hunza River Disaster

A disaster happening that you’ve never heard of….

• Six months ago, on January 4th, 2010 in the remote Hunza River Valley of northern Pakistan, a massive landslide buried the village of Attabad, destroying 26 homes, killing 20 people, and damming up the Hunza River.

• As the newly-formed lake grew, authorities rushed to evacuate and supply those affected in the landslide area and upstream. The lake is now over 300 feet deep and 16km (10 mi) long, submerging miles of highway, farms and homes.

• Earlier this week, the lake reached the top of the natural dam, and began to spill out - rapid erosion of the landslide debris has authorities worried about a potential breach, and locals have been evacuated as officials monitor the developing situation.

Page 2: Hunza River Disaster

This photograph was taken

while a secondary

landslide was taking place near Attabad

village in northern

Pakistan on January 22, 2010, after the original

massive landslide of January 4th

blocked most of the Hunza Valley and

dammed the Hunza River

Page 3: Hunza River Disaster

This photograph was taken

while a secondary

landslide was taking place near Attabad

village in northern

Pakistan on January 22, 2010, after the original

massive landslide of January 4th

blocked most of the Hunza Valley and

dammed the Hunza River

Page 4: Hunza River Disaster

Huge clouds of dust arise

as land slides continued on January 6, 2010, the

second day of the

Attabad

disaster.

Page 5: Hunza River Disaster

The people of Gojal

carrying daily essentials on their backs across the

landslide site on January 12, 2010..

Page 6: Hunza River Disaster

A view of the newly-forming lake formed due to blockage of the Hunza River, seen three days after the landslide, on January 7, 2010.

Page 7: Hunza River Disaster

Land cracks visible in the land near what remains of the village of Attabad on February 1, 2010.

Page 8: Hunza River Disaster

Another view of

the growing

lake formed

behind the landslide, seen from the ruins

of Attabad village on February

1, 2010.

Page 9: Hunza River Disaster

Local volunteers conducting search for bodies in

rubble near the village of

Attabad on January 6,

2010

Page 10: Hunza River Disaster

A funeral service is held for some of the victims of the Hunza Valley landslide on January 6, 2010.

Page 11: Hunza River Disaster

Men climb across landslide debris in the Hunza River Valley on January 7, 2010. The growing lake is visible in the background.

Page 12: Hunza River Disaster

With the only highway wiped out by the landslide, Gojal Valley locals turn to airlifts to help them evacuate and get access to goods and services.

Page 13: Hunza River Disaster

In this image taken on Thursday March 11, 2010, Pakistani loaders carrying goods imported from neighboring China which are ferried through a lake due

to blockade of the Karakoram Highway, in Attabad, northern Pakistan. A massive landslide early this year formed a natural dam in the Hunza River created a lake that is consuming upstream as it expands. If dam breaks, a

flash flood could threaten downstream villages.

Page 14: Hunza River Disaster

As water rises, locals use a makeshift pedestrian bridge to help them supply and evacuate in the Hunza River Valley in northern Pakistan. The pillars are from an under-construction "friendship bridge" for the now-partly-submerged

Karakoram Highway.

Page 15: Hunza River Disaster

This image, acquired by the Advanced Land Imager (ALI) aboard NASA's Earth Observing-1 (EO-1) satellite on March 16th, 2010 shows the blocked

Hunza River and the growing lake, then 11 km (7 mi) long, inundating several villages and 5 km (3 mi) of the Karakoram Highway. Landslide blockage is at

lower right

Page 16: Hunza River Disaster

Pillars of the under-construction "friendship bridge" for the Karakoram Highway, now flooded - seen on May 2nd, 2010, only two weeks after the

same scene was photographed from a different angle two slides back!

Page 17: Hunza River Disaster

Heavy machinery is employed to lift and carry

a wooden boat up the side of the landslide

debris to be deposited in the lake to

aid evacuation and supply missions on April 6, 2010

Page 18: Hunza River Disaster

In this image taken on April

30, 2010, local people use a boat to

ferry their vehicles in a lake caused by landslide

which cuts off part of the Karakoram highway to

China, in the Hunza district

of northern Pakistan.

Page 19: Hunza River Disaster

An aerial view shows a

lake overtaking a village in the Hunza district

of northern Pakistan on Saturday, May 29, 2010.

Page 20: Hunza River Disaster

Women, who lived near a lake created after a landslide in Hunza district, cut barley in a field in Seeshghat village in Hunza district of northern Pakistan May

24, 2010

Page 21: Hunza River Disaster

Villagers, who lived near a lake created after a landslide in Hunza district, collect belongings from their home at Sheeshghat village in Hunza district of

northern Pakistan May 24, 2010.

Page 22: Hunza River Disaster

Pakistani soldiers help villagers as they board an army helicopter in the village of Altitin in the Hunza district of northern Pakistan on May 21, 2010. Flooding from a lake in northern Pakistan risks affecting 40,000 residents of some 34

villages already evacuated to safety, a top disaster management official said.

Page 23: Hunza River Disaster

Children walk near tents set up for displaced people who were affected by a natural dam caused by a landslide in Attabad village in Hunza district of

northern Pakistan May 19, 2010

Page 24: Hunza River Disaster

A girl cries while sitting with others to protest against the government's failure to announce compensation for those displaced by a lake created after a landslide

during a demonstration in Attaabad village in Hunza district of northern Pakistan on May 22, 2010

Page 25: Hunza River Disaster

A view from a military helicopter of the lake growing behind a natural dam caused by a landslide which passes through Sheeshgat village in Hunza district

of northern Pakistan May 24, 2010.

Page 26: Hunza River Disaster

Workers use machines to dig a

spillway to release water

pressure built up by the natural

dam caused by a landslide in

Attabad village in Hunza district of

northern Pakistan May 12, 2010.

Fears are growing a lake created by a landslide will

burst and cause a massive flood that could affect

more than 50,000 people in

northern Pakistan and disrupt a key

trade link with China

Page 27: Hunza River Disaster

A gate near an orchard

lies submerged in the upper

Hunza Valley on April 14th,

2010. Around 40 houses in

Ayeenabad and

Shishkat Payeen

have been dismantled

to save valuables

from sinking in the lake

water

Page 28: Hunza River Disaster

A partially submerged pedestrian bridge in the Upper Hunza Valley, seen on May 7th, 2010

Page 29: Hunza River Disaster

•After the lake began to flow through the spillway that was cut into the landslide debris on May 29th, the flow of the water has increased, but still does not match the inflow upstream from the Hunza River.

•And - as is evidenced by these two images (May 30th on the left, June 4th on the right), the outflow is eroding the debris, working back toward the lake - potentially signaling an upcoming breach where nearly five months worth of river flow might wash away the dam and cause serious flooding downstream.

•Scientists and authorities are monitoring the situation and evacuations have been undertaken for all threatened areas.

Page 30: Hunza River Disaster

What will happen next?• How would you deal with this disaster?• There is no bridge left…• There is enormous pressure on the ‘natural’

dam caused by the landslide and water is beginning to wash over the top.

• In your group, discuss what you think should be done and write on the sugar paper and select someone to report back

• Plenary - Watch this video…• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QMye_ZqgEoo

Page 31: Hunza River Disaster

What will happen next?• Did they have any better ideas?• What do you think will happen to the

displaced people of the valley?• What would you do with these people to

ensure their safety in the short-term and their livelihood in the long term?

QUESTION TO TAKE AWAY:

Why have you not heard of this before now?

Page 32: Hunza River Disaster

CREDITS:

• Photographs and information from the Zulfir Ali Khan/Pamir Times, Reuters, David Petley, FOCUS, NASA, JISC, AP Photos.

• PowerPoint by Edu4DRR with thanks to Garry de la Pomerai.

• You can watch the initial landslide occur at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zevBVop-sCk

Page 33: Hunza River Disaster

The Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER) on the Terra satellite acquired this false-color image of the landslide lake on June 1, 2010 - now 16km (10 mi) long. Compare to satellite image earlier in slideshow, taken 10 weeks earlier, and see that the lake has grown by 5km in length. Water appears in varying shades of blue. Vegetation is red. Bare rock appears in shades of brown and gray.