On this episode of Emergency Preparedness in Canada (EPIC) Podcast, we look back in history 119 years at the deadliest landslide in Canadian history. Why did it happen? What can we learn from it today? And will it happen again?
All this and more on this episode of EPIC Podcast: Current, Relevant, Canadian
Episode Links:
Alberta Emergency Management Agency. (2017, June). Turtle Mountain Response Plan.
response-protocol-for-turtle-mountain.pdf">https://open.alberta.ca/dataset/8639caec-476a-45e0-b02e-ebdaa369b6f7/resource/afcc8832-4af2-4b3d-baab-16536ed7d951/download/emergency-
response-protocol-for-turtle-mountain.pdf
Alberta Geological Survey. (2020). Turtle Mountain Monitoring.
https://ags.aer.ca/research-initiatives/turtle-mountain-monitoring
Cruden, D. & Martin, D. (2009) A century of risk management at the Frank Slide, Canada. IAEG Paper Number 772.
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/254104888_A_century_of_risk_management_at_the_Frank_Slide_Canada
Energy Resources Conservation Board. (2009, May). ERCB/AGS Roles and Responsibilities Manual for the Turtle Mountain Monitoring Project, Alberta.
https://docs.google.com/viewer?url=https%3A%2F%2Fstatic.ags.aer.ca%2Ffiles%2Fdocument%2FOFR%2FOFR_2009_06.pdf
Vallee, M. (2018, September 2). Falling in Place: Geoscience, Disaster, and Cultural Heritage at the Frank Slide, Canada’s Deadliest Rockslide. Space and Culture, 22(1), 66-76.
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/1206331218795829
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Hosts:
Grayson Cockett
Student Host/Episode Creator:
Jenny Steenstra, @jennysteenstra (twitter)
Epic Podcast is Sponsored by the Alberta Podcast Network