Potential of Documentary Evidence to Study Fatalities of Hydrological and Meteorological Events in the Czech Republic

This paper presents the potential of documentary evidence for enhancing the study of fatalities taking place in the course of hydrological and meteorological events (HMEs). Chronicles, “books of memory”, weather diaries, newspapers (media), parliamentary proposals, epigraphic evidence, systematic me...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inWater (Basel) Vol. 11; no. 10; p. 2014
Main Authors Brázdil, Rudolf, Chromá, Kateřina, Řehoř, Jan, Zahradníček, Pavel, Dolák, Lukáš, Řezníčková, Ladislava, Dobrovolný, Petr
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Basel MDPI AG 01.10.2019
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:This paper presents the potential of documentary evidence for enhancing the study of fatalities taking place in the course of hydrological and meteorological events (HMEs). Chronicles, “books of memory”, weather diaries, newspapers (media), parliamentary proposals, epigraphic evidence, systematic meteorological/hydrological observations, and professional papers provide a broad base for gathering such information in the Czech Republic, especially since 1901. The spatiotemporal variability of 269 fatalities in the Czech Republic arising out of 103 HMEs (flood, flash flood, windstorm, convective storm, lightning, frost, snow/glaze-ice calamity, heat, and other events) in the 1981–2018 period is presented, with particular attention to closer characterisation of fatalities (gender, age, cause of death, place, type of death, and behaviour). Examples of three outstanding events with the highest numbers of fatalities (severe frosts in the extremely cold winter of 1928/1929, a flash flood on 9 June 1970, and a rain flood in July 1997) are described in detail. Discussion of results includes the problem of data uncertainty, factors influencing the numbers of fatalities, and the broader context. Since floods are responsible for the highest proportion of HME-related deaths, places with fatalities are located mainly around rivers and drowning appears as the main cause of death. In the further classification of fatalities, males and adults clearly prevail, while indirect victims and hazardous behaviour are strongly represented.
ISSN:2073-4441
2073-4441
DOI:10.3390/w11102014