Siaolin Village, Kaohsiung

Coordinates: 23°09′45″N 120°38′40″E / 23.162497°N 120.644388°E / 23.162497; 120.644388

Siaolin Village in Jiasian District
Remains of the village after Typhoon Morakot.

Siaolin Village (Chinese: 小林村; Hanyu Pinyin: Xiaolin; Tongyong Pinyin: Siaolin; Wade–Giles: Hsiao-Lin) is a village in the rural district of Jiasian, Kaohsiung City, Taiwan. It is in a largely agricultural area and was destroyed by a landslide during Typhoon Morakot in 2009.[1]

Typhoon Morakot

Typhoon Morakot brought more than 60% of the average rainfall (about 2440-3270 mm) and 85% of the total rainfall in 2009.[2][3] This excessive rainfall from Typhoon Morakot resulted in a landslide to occur at 6:17 a.m.on August 9, 2009.[2]

Impacts and Casualties

There are two parts of Siaolin Village, north and south. The north part is located at a lower elevation and was completely wiped out by the landslide while the south part was unaffected. Main sediment had only buried part of the village, but an artificial dam broke, burying the rest of it.[2][3] The entire village was nearly razed to the ground, leaving one building standing.[1]

Over 600 residents were believed to have been buried alive, while 150 residents were transported to safety after the disaster.[1] Some people remained trapped several days after the disaster and was in urgent need for assistance.[4]

Tourism and agriculture, the village's main industry, were put to a complete halt in the village.[2] The Qishan River became dammed because of the debris (otherwise known as a landslide dam), effecting the ecosystem in the river and surrounding area.[2]

Aftermath

Rescuers and soldiers were dispatched by the government to look for survivors, but arrival was slow due to the amount of debris and continuous fall of rain. [4] Measurements were also taken and the average depth of the landslide was approximated to be 44.6 mm.[2]

Over 400 people died because of this mass movement of land, and, even though this high death toll and devastation was not directly a result of flooding or winds but by another disaster created by excessive saturation of the land, Typhoon Morakot became the deadliest typhoon to hit Taiwan since the establishment of Taiwan's typhoon warning system in 1992.[2]

On January 15, 2011, a ground-breaking ceremony was held for Siaolin No. 2 at a plot of land where 120 permanent houses will be built for survivors of the landslide.[5] On 15 January 2012, the Xiaolin Village Memorial Park was opened to commemorate the victims.

See also

References

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