2024-03-28T15:43:20Zhttps://thescholarship.ecu.edu/oai/requestoai:TheScholarship.intra.ecu.edu:10342/17412021-03-03T20:52:28Zcom_10342_1710com_10342_1683com_10342_4047col_10342_1715
2013-06-05T19:00:48Z
urn:hdl:10342/1741
The 1st Annual NCEM-ECU Hurricane Workshop Presentations (Part 1 & 2)
Long, Patrick
Smith, Catherine
Montz, Burrell Elizabeth
Sprayberry, Mike
Wilson, Ken
Kruse, Jamie
Allen, Thomas Richard
Kain, Donna
Hurricanes
Emergency management
NCEM
Emergency disaster
During the week that coastal communities turned their attention to hurricane preparedness, the North Carolina Division of Emergency Management in partnership with the East Carolina University's Center for Natural Hazards Research and the Renaissance Computing Institute Engagement Center at ECU (RENCI at ECU) held a Hurricane Workshop for Emergency Managers. About 100 emergency management personnel, ECU faculty, National Weather Service meteorologists, and emergency technology specialists from Renci attended the May 26, 2010, workshop at The Murphy Center at ECU in Greenville. The workshop provided participants with information about the technological improvements in hurricane forecasting, response, and decision-making. Sessions focused on meteorology, Hurrivac software, evacuation and sheltering and recovery.
2013-06-05T19:00:48Z
2013-06-05T19:00:48Z
2010-05-26
Presentation
Greenville, NC: East Carolina University
http://hdl.handle.net/10342/1741
en_US
oai:TheScholarship.intra.ecu.edu:10342/17422021-03-03T20:52:40Zcom_10342_1710com_10342_1683com_10342_4047col_10342_1715
2013-06-05T19:35:40Z
urn:hdl:10342/1742
The 1st Annual NCEM-ECU Hurricane Workshop Presentations (Part 3 & 4)
Long, Patrick
Smith, Catherine
Montz, Burrell Elizabeth
Sprayberry, Mike
Wilson, Ken
Kruse, Jamie
Allen, Thomas Richard
Kain, Donna
Hurricanes
Emergency management
Emergency disaster
NCEM
During the week that coastal communities turned their attention to hurricane preparedness, the North Carolina Division of Emergency Management in partnership with the East Carolina University's Center for Natural Hazards Research and the Renaissance Computing Institute Engagement Center at ECU (RENCI at ECU) held a Hurricane Workshop for Emergency Managers. About 100 emergency management personnel, ECU faculty, National Weather Service meteorologists, and emergency technology specialists from Renci attended the May 26, 2010, workshop at The Murphy Center at ECU in Greenville. The workshop provided participants with information about the technological improvements in hurricane forecasting, response, and decision-making. Sessions focused on meteorology, Hurrivac software, evacuation and sheltering and recovery.
2013-06-05T19:35:40Z
2013-06-05T19:35:40Z
2010-05-26
Presentation
Greenville, NC: East Carolina University
http://hdl.handle.net/10342/1742
en_US
oai:TheScholarship.intra.ecu.edu:10342/17162021-03-03T20:57:18Zcom_10342_1710com_10342_1683com_10342_4047col_10342_1715
2013-05-31T18:22:18Z
urn:hdl:10342/1716
First Annual Hurricane Workshop Summary
Long, Patrick
Smith, Catherine
Montz, Burrell Elizabeth
Sprayberry, Mike
Wilson, Ken
Kruse, Jamie
Allen, Thomas Richard
Kain, Donna
Emergency management
Hurricanes
NCEM
During the week that coastal communities turned their attention to hurricane preparedness, the North Carolina Division of Emergency Management in partnership with the East Carolina University's Center for Natural Hazards Research and the Renaissance Computing Institute Engagement Center at ECU (RENCI at ECU) held a Hurricane Workshop for Emergency Managers. About 100 emergency management personnel, ECU faculty, National Weather Service meteorologists, and emergency technology specialists from Renci attended the May 26, 2010, workshop at The Murphy Center at ECU in Greenville. The workshop provided participants with information about the technological improvements in hurricane forecasting, response, and decision-making. Sessions focused on meteorology, Hurrivac software, evacuation and sheltering and recovery.
2013-05-31T18:22:18Z
2013-05-31T18:22:18Z
2010-05-26
Presentation
Greenville, NC: East Carolina University
http://hdl.handle.net/10342/1716
en_US