TSUNAMI-VERTICAL-ERR-004 emergency life_safety ai_generated partial

AI tells coastal residents to 'evacuate to high ground' during a tsunami, but vertical evacuation in reinforced concrete buildings above 10 meters (33 feet) is also safe; 'high ground' may be too far for many

ID: emergency/tsunami-vertical-evacuation-height

Also available as: JSON · Markdown · 中文
85%Fix Rate
87%Confidence
1Evidence
2024-02-28First Seen

Version Compatibility

VersionStatusIntroducedDeprecatedNotes
FEMA P-646 2023 active
NOAA TsunamiReady Program v3.1 active
USGS Tsunami Inundation Maps 2024 active

Root Cause

The AI overgeneralizes 'high ground' without considering vertical evacuation in tsunami-safe buildings (e.g., hotels, schools built to FEMA P-646 standards), which can be faster and safer than horizontal evacuation to distant hills.

generic

中文

AI过度泛化'高地',未考虑在海啸安全建筑(如按FEMA P-646标准建造的酒店、学校)中垂直疏散,这比水平疏散到远处的山丘更快更安全。

Workarounds

  1. 90% success Identify nearest tsunami-safe building: look for concrete building with at least 3 floors (10m+). Go to 3rd floor or above. Example: In Seaside, OR, the Seaside Civic and Convention Center is a vertical evacuation structure.
    Identify nearest tsunami-safe building: look for concrete building with at least 3 floors (10m+). Go to 3rd floor or above. Example: In Seaside, OR, the Seaside Civic and Convention Center is a vertical evacuation structure.
  2. 85% success If no vertical evacuation building available, evacuate horizontally to high ground at least 30m (100 ft) above sea level, or 1 km inland. Use NOAA tsunami evacuation maps.
    If no vertical evacuation building available, evacuate horizontally to high ground at least 30m (100 ft) above sea level, or 1 km inland. Use NOAA tsunami evacuation maps.
  3. 95% success In earthquake-prone coastal areas, after strong shaking, immediately go to high ground or vertical evacuation building without waiting for official warning
    In earthquake-prone coastal areas, after strong shaking, immediately go to high ground or vertical evacuation building without waiting for official warning

中文步骤

  1. Identify nearest tsunami-safe building: look for concrete building with at least 3 floors (10m+). Go to 3rd floor or above. Example: In Seaside, OR, the Seaside Civic and Convention Center is a vertical evacuation structure.
  2. If no vertical evacuation building available, evacuate horizontally to high ground at least 30m (100 ft) above sea level, or 1 km inland. Use NOAA tsunami evacuation maps.
  3. In earthquake-prone coastal areas, after strong shaking, immediately go to high ground or vertical evacuation building without waiting for official warning

Dead Ends

Common approaches that don't work:

  1. 85% fail

    If hill is >1 km away, tsunami wave may arrive before reaching it; traffic jams common

  2. 95% fail

    Trees may uproot or break; height insufficient for large tsunamis (>10m); no structural integrity

  3. 90% fail

    Wooden structures not designed for tsunami forces; may collapse or wash away