Looking at the way intense rainfall can cause massive flows of mud, rocks, boulders, and anything in its path, this episode helps you understand how to manage the risk o debris flows that often follows fires on steep hillsides and mountains. Dr. Jones talks about the hydrophobic chemicals that make this type of terrain so susceptible to this deadly hazard. Consider how society manages this risk: building more interventions to stop mud, water, and debris from inundating neighborhoods leading to death and destruction. How would you manage this risk, as you manage risks every day? Dr Jones says, "don't underestimate the risk."
Episode 117 - Hurricane Season
Episode 116 - What the U.S. Can Learn From Earthquakes in Turkey
Episode 115 - The Reality of Atmospheric Rivers
Episode 114 - All About Liquefaction
Episode 113 - The Value of Retrofits
Episode 112 - Happening Right Now: More Extreme Disaster Events
Episode 111 - Tempo
Episode 110 - When You Have a Lot of Earthquakes, You Have a Lot of Earthquakes
Episode 109 - Why Are Schools Safer?
Episode 108 - Weak Faults Have Bigger Earthquakes
Episode 107 - The Misconception of the ”Massive” Earthquake
Episode 106 - What We Can Learn from New Zealand
Episode 105 - Looking for Anomalies in All the Wrong Places
Episode 104 - The Dangerous Myth of the “Ring of Fire”
Episode 103 - Pandemic Randomness
Episode 102 - Human History of Random Thoughts
Episode 101 - Random Acts of Shaking
Episode 100 - The Magic Eyes of the Geologist
Episode 99 - Why Plate Tectonics Matters to You
Episode 98 - Is It Too Late to Cool the Earth?
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