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Indigenous knowledge and the near field population response during the 2007 Solomon Islands tsunami

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Abstract

The magnitude 8.1 earthquake and subsequent tsunami killed 52 people when it hit the Solomon Islands on 2 April 2007. That number would have likely been considerably higher were it not for the appropriate reaction of the indigenous coastal populations and a helpful physical geography. Buffering coral reefs reflected some wave energy back to sea, reducing the power of the wave. Hills a short distance behind the coastal villages provided accessible havens. Despite this beneficial physiography, immigrant populations died at disproportionately high rates in comparably damaged areas because they did not recognize the signs of the impeding tsunami. The indigenous population of Tapurai, which lacks a steep barrier reef to reflect the incoming energy, experienced a much more powerful wave, and the population suffered heavy losses. Indigenous knowledge as an integral tool in basin wide tsunami warning systems has the potential to mitigate disasters in the near field. Community-based disaster management plans must be cognizant of educating diverse populations that have different understandings of their environment.

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Notes

  1. Such international agreements that recognize the value of indigenous knowledge for sustainable development include: the Rio Declaration, Agenda 21, Convention of Biodiversity, World Conference on Science, World Summit on Sustainable Development, and the work of the International Decade for the World’s Indigenous Peoples.

  2. The new vulnerability approach to reducing disaster risk took into account the human dimensions of the affected community, which includes indigenous knowledge and practice (Dekens 2007). For further explanation of the vulnerability approach, see Wisner et al. (2004).

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Acknowledgements

The government of the Solomon Islands, specifically the National Disaster Management Office and Bureau of Mines and Energy, provided logistical support, along with D. and K. Kennedy and G. Griffiths in Gizo, and L. Kong at UNESCO. Thanks to B. Taino of Pailongge for assistance in the field. This work was funded by the United States National Science Foundation Small Grants for Exploratory Research program (EAR-0734982) in concert with a NSF Partnership in International Research and Education Grant (OISE-0530151).

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Correspondence to Brian G. McAdoo.

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McAdoo, B.G., Moore, A. & Baumwoll, J. Indigenous knowledge and the near field population response during the 2007 Solomon Islands tsunami. Nat Hazards 48, 73–82 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11069-008-9249-z

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