Kathmandu Valley Single Hazards and Multi-Hazard Interrelationships Database
DOI10.5281/zenodo.13749299Zenodo13749299MaRDI QIDQ6694225FDOQ6694225
Dataset published at Zenodo repository.
Faith E. Taylor, Robert Šakić Trogrlić, Bruce Malamud, Harriet E. Thompson, Joel C. Gill
Publication date: 11 September 2024
Copyright license: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
This Kathmandu Valley Single Hazards and Multi-Hazard Interrelationships Database uses a systematic review of blended evidence types (academic literature, grey literature, media, databases, and social media) to compile single hazard and multi-hazard interrelationship exemplars of natural hazards in the context of Kathmandu Valley. We identify 58 sources of evidence for single hazard types and 21 sources of evidence for multi-hazard interrelationships. These sources evidence 21 single hazard types across six hazard groups, and 83 multi-hazard interrelationships that could influence Kathmandu Valley. Of these multi-hazard interrelationships, 12 have direct case study evidence of previous influence in Kathmandu Valley. This Excel database accompanies the paper Thompson et al. (2024). The Kathmandu Valley Single Hazards and Multi-Hazard Interrelationships Databasecomprises the following sheets: A. Single Hazards Evidence B. Hazard Interrelationships Evidence C. Hazard Interrelationships Matrix D. Matrix Evidence E. Definitions (Source Types) F. Definitions (Hazards) G. Definitions (Interrelationships) H. References In Sheet A, each row in the database describes a separate source of evidence of a single hazard influencing Kathmandu Valley. In each column, we describe the evidence using the qualifiers outlined below: Hazard type Source information and link Source content Hazard interrelationships and anthropogenic processes Video evidence Source reflections Major event typical frequency reflection Any other reflection on a single hazard Impact In Sheet B, each row in the database describes a separate source of evidence of a multi-hazard interrelationship influencing Kathmandu Valley. In each column, we describe the evidence using the qualifiers outlined below: Hazard type Source information and link Source content Hazard sequence Source reflections Impact Input from practitioner stakeholders Input from practitioner stakeholders - prioritisation We refer the reader to Thompson et al. (2024) for details of the methodology used to populate this database. References Thompson, H. E., Gill, J. C., Šakić Trogrlić, R., Taylor, F. E., and Malamud, B. D.: A methodology to compile multi-hazard interrelationships in a data-scarce setting: an application to Kathmandu Valley, Nepal, Nat. Hazards Earth Syst. Sci. Discuss. [preprint], https://doi.org/10.5194/nhess-2024-101, in review, 2024.
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