Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Subscription Access
Open Access Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Restricted Access Subscription Access

Oh! It is Cloud Burst!


Affiliations
1 Indian Science Cruiser, India
     

   Subscribe/Renew Journal


It was a black Friday on the 6th of August 2010 (actually the 5th night) for the inhabitants of the town Leh located in the Ladakh region of Janimu and Kashmir. The next day on the 7 th of August 2010 the entire country were dumbstruck to hear the news of a natural disaster of enormous magnitude caused by cloudbursts in the town of Leh the day before. The extent of damage could be guessed from the loss of 179 lives and about 400 people getting injured with various degrees. The entire town with all its buildings, roads and fields got totally submerged under a thick cover of layers of dense liquid mud caused by landslide and flash flood. The sudden and huge dimension of mudflow is a matter of spine chilling experience which only reminds one the horror of tsunami in recent time affecting the entire south eastern coastal region of our earth. So it is quite natural to try to understand the phenomenon which can bring a destruction of this scale within a span of not more than a few minutes.


User
Subscription Login to verify subscription
Notifications
Font Size

Abstract Views: 170

PDF Views: 3




  • Oh! It is Cloud Burst!

Abstract Views: 170  |  PDF Views: 3

Authors

Deb Kumar Sen
Indian Science Cruiser, India

Abstract


It was a black Friday on the 6th of August 2010 (actually the 5th night) for the inhabitants of the town Leh located in the Ladakh region of Janimu and Kashmir. The next day on the 7 th of August 2010 the entire country were dumbstruck to hear the news of a natural disaster of enormous magnitude caused by cloudbursts in the town of Leh the day before. The extent of damage could be guessed from the loss of 179 lives and about 400 people getting injured with various degrees. The entire town with all its buildings, roads and fields got totally submerged under a thick cover of layers of dense liquid mud caused by landslide and flash flood. The sudden and huge dimension of mudflow is a matter of spine chilling experience which only reminds one the horror of tsunami in recent time affecting the entire south eastern coastal region of our earth. So it is quite natural to try to understand the phenomenon which can bring a destruction of this scale within a span of not more than a few minutes.