“Comprehending the Calamity” by Emma Burke and “Horrific Wreck of the City” by Fred Hewitt are two historical articles that both describe the destruction of the San Francisco earthquake in 1906 and how it affected the people. Hewitt says on page 1, “No pen can record the sufferings of those who were crushed to death or buried in the ruins that encompassed them in an instant after 5:13 o’clock Wednesday morning.” Likewise, Emma Burke says on page 2, “The fallen chimneys had torn through the ceilings into two of our rooms; the flat tin roof had thus been bent down, and now acted as a funnel. We heard an ominous drip, drip, and then a steady splash.” These pieces of evidence show both of the authors believe that this horrible earthquake destructed the city of San Francisco.
“ (50). Additionally, Paul Fisher’s school grounds experienced a sinkhole where many portable classrooms were swallowed into the ground. According to the text, “ ‘What is it?’ I yelled at Joey. ‘An earthquake?’
From Old to New The article ‘The Really Big One’ written by Kathryn Schulz discusses the Cascadia Subduction Zone and its threat to the people of the Pacific Northwest. She uses the article to inform the public of how the zone was discovered, how devastating the earthquakes and tsunamis will be in this zone, and how most of the Pacific Northwest is not prepared for this zone to erupt. After Schulz article was published, it became a well known across the nation. Everyone who read the article became scared at the thought of this impending doom.
Fort mason was luckily saved from the fire as were some of the people who were trapped. The Great Fire spread across town overnight and then changed it’s path to the southern part of the city. Fire Chief Engineer Dennis T. Sullivan was announced dead at 1 am, April 22, 1906.By that time comes the earthquake has stopped and so have all the big aftershocks . Leaving San Francisco with little short tremors every now and then. Believe it or not this is just one of multiple natural Disasters and earthquakes that have hit San Francisco.
Chines and other similar races had very difficult times back then 1900’s. They were discriminated and beaten. Both stories Dragonwings and “The Great 1906 San Francisco Earthquake and Fire” similar in ways and different in others. Overall they both portray the hard life of a chinese in the U.S. in the 1900’s. All Together, they are alike by, both having character in the U.S.A and them being discriminated upon.
This is shown through two eye witness accounts. ““Comprehending the Calamity” by Emma Burke and “Horrific Wreck of the City”By Fred Hewitt are very similar;these eye witness accounts of the San Francisco earthquake of 1906 talk of the horror, but in different ways. One is optimistic and the other is pessimistic. “Comprehending the Calamity” and “The Horrific Wreck
Juneau is in a very unique situation. The city faces multiple geologic processes that could be dangerous. These processes can be very hazardous. Some of the hazards the city faces avalanches, earthquakes, heavy snow, landslides, and tsunamis. Although the city faces regular avalanches and the possibility of landslides the town’s major hazard is earthquakes.
1 Dead in Attic: After Katrina Over the summer, I read the book called 1 Dead in the Attic. The book was about the author Chris Rose personal story about Hurricane Katrina.
“I saw those policemen enveloped in a shower of falling stone. Their lives must have been blotted out in an instant.” this quote was from an article called “Horrific Wreck of the City” told by a man named Fred Hewitt. He was a eye witness in the 1906 earthquake, so was a woman named Emma Burke who was also in the disaster. The earthquake in 1906 is one of the most significant earthquakes of all time, says the USGS.
As the sun breaks, the Bay Area hive awakens; and 265,000 people commute to San Francisco. My day starts at 7:35 a.m in front of the In and Out Burger in Mill Valley. There, a faded, orange CYO bus picks up a group of sleepy SI students. The tall stairs of the old bus greet me every morning as I climb them to begin my daily expedition into the city.
The book I read is Unbroken by Laura Hillenbrand. Holy cow! What a book. It takes you through the story of the great olympic runner Louis Zamperini. We go with him to the Olympics, to Hawaii, to Japan, and then back to California, where he grew up as a kid.
Roughly 6 years ago, 2011 an earth moving quake hit Japan, a tremendous tsunami was triggered and numerous were injured died. What was responsible you may ask? The Pacific Ocean and the North American tectonic plate. A massive amount of energy had been stored for many years and after awhile it needed to be released, as an earthquake. As a result of that earthquake, ocean water was displaced and that created a tsunami.
“The roar was still in the air, the buckling rumble of the fall. This was the world now. Smoke and ash came rolling down streets and turning corners, busting around corners, seismic tides of smoke, with office paper flashing past, standard sheets with cutting edge, skimming, whipping past, otherworldly things in the morning pall.” (P.1 L.19). DeLillo makes great of words which are often associated with disasters, such as seismic, tides and rumble.
It ripped up trees, destroyed cars, carried houses into the air… and Justin Sky was caught in the middle of it all. Justin tried to take cover, but everything was being destroyed. Him and his family searched frantically for shelter, and ran into a small building on the edge of town. They ducked into the room, looking for
The Tohoku Earthquake was the most powerful earthquake recorded to have hit Japan. The earthquake was a magnitude 9.0 off the coasts of Japan that occurred at 2:46pm on Friday 11 March 2011, which triggered a powerful tsunami that reached the height up to 10.4 meters. A Japanese National Police Agency reported 15,889 deaths, 6,152 injured, and 2,601 people missing, 127,290 buildings totally collapse, 272,788 buildings half collapse, and another 747,989 buildings partially damaged. The Tohoku earthquake and tsunami caused severe structural damage in northeastern Japan, including heavy damage to roads, railways and dams, not to mention fires in many areas. It was the toughest and the most difficult crisis in Japan after the World War 2 leaving