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Prepared for Pam

ENVIRONMENT

When Cyclone Pam ripped across the tiny South Pacific island nation of Vanuatu, there were fears its monstrous winds could kill thousands. But as aid workers finally reached the archipelago’s hard-hit outer islands, it appeared that residents’ careful planning had spared the lives of most. (Associated Press)

Use our activity to prepare for extreme natural events in your own community.

Teachers, scroll down for a quick list of key resources in our Teachers’ Toolkit, including a link to today’s MapMaker Interactive map.

Use the new latitude/longitude feature on our MapMaker Interactive to plot the path of Tropical Cyclone Pam. Here’s a how-to.

Discussion Ideas

Your map might look something like this! We used the “satellite” base map, simply because our cyclone markers showed up nicely against the dark blue Pacific. We also provided the wind speed for each point, and a marker for Tanna, the island hardest hit by Tropical Cyclone Pam.

Can’t access our MapMaker Interactive? You can still plot Pam’s path using the coordinates and our 1-page maps of Vanuatu or Australia and Oceania here.

 

 

 

 

TEACHERS’ TOOLKIT

AP: Vanuatu avoids big casualties with shelter and early warning

Nat Geo: Preparing for Extreme Natural Events

Nat Geo: Track Tropical Cyclone Pam map

Nat Geo: Vanuatu 1-page map

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