
Natural Disasters
Everyday natural disasters occur somewhere in the world. Disasters are caused by flooding, hurricanes, typhoons, earthquakes, and more.
Students rarely have the ability to view the effects of natural disasters, except on TV.
However, there is one technology that is available for students to watch natural disasters occur or see the effects after they have occurred.
This technology is called Google Earth. Using this free technology, students get a bird’s eye view of a natural disaster area with remarkable high resolution.
This technology was only available to scientists and government officials until recently. Teachers and students now have access to this technology and they can investigate the cause and effect of any natural disaster in the world.
Google Earth
When word of a natural disaster is unfolding somewhere in the world and announced on the news, students can use Google Earth to conduct an investigation of the disaster’s effect.
If enough warning is given, examples are a hurricane or typhoon; students can view the expected land fall areas before they strike. Then students can view the effects after the hurricane or typhoon passes through the area.
Natural Disasters
Students can investigate using Google Earth, include:
Volcano Eruptions – investigation lava flows and impact on surrounding vegetation.
Earthquakes – especially in populated areas, investigating the impact on human development and land masses.
Major Floods – investigate floods, along with watershed cause and effects.
Tsunamis – investigate the destructive power of Tsunamis, by comparing before and after images of the seashore and surrounding landscape.
Wild Fires – investigate and track the spread of wild fires anywhere in the world to determine the effect, when compared to previous data.
Droughts – monitor the effect on vegetation, rivers, and watersheds as droughts continue over a period of time.
Blizzards – investigate the effect when blizzards cover a large region, such as the east coast blizzard of 1995.
Tornadoes – investigate the damage caused by a tornadoes’ impact on areas populated by humans, comparing the different levels of tornadoes.
Additional Information and Resources
Natural Disasters and Investigating Causes
Understanding Scientific Inquiry
20 Questions to Ask Students in Science Projects
Tags: earthquakes, google earth, natural disasters, science investigations

















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