Abstract
The influx of millions of Syrian refugees into Turkey has rapidly changed the
population distribution along the Dead Sea Rift and East Anatolian fault
zones. In contrast to other countries in the Middle East where refugees are
accommodated in camp environments, the majority of displaced individuals in
Turkey are integrated into local cities, towns, and villages – placing
stress on urban settings and increasing potential exposure to strong
earthquake shaking. Yet displaced populations are often unaccounted for in
the census-based population models used in earthquake fatality estimations.
This study creates a minimally modeled refugee gridded population model and
analyzes its impact on semi-empirical fatality estimations across southeast
Turkey. Daytime and nighttime fatality estimates were produced for five fault
segments at earthquake magnitudes 5.8, 6.4, and 7.0. Baseline fatality
estimates calculated from census-based population estimates for the study
area varied in scale from tens to thousands of fatalities, with higher death
totals in nighttime scenarios. Refugee fatality estimations were analyzed
across 500 semi-random building occupancy distributions. Median fatality
estimates for refugee populations added non-negligible contributions to
earthquake fatalities at four of five fault locations, increasing total
fatality estimates by 7–27 %. These findings communicate the necessity
of incorporating refugee statistics into earthquake fatality estimations in
southeast Turkey and the ongoing importance of placing environmental hazards
in their appropriate regional and temporal context.
Citation
ID:
213491
Ref Key:
wilson2018naturalassessing