Which line is used to show the debris of the fallen building
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hey mate your answer is here. hope it helps . Mark it as brainliest please.When an earthquake strikes a town, or a building is levelled by an explosion, news footage invariably shows search and rescue teams trawling through the rubble looking for survivors. But what does it take to rescue people trapped under tons of concrete?
Step one - coordination
The first thing is to activate search and rescue teams, often highly trained volunteers.
"Most of our members are doctors, ambulance operators, engineers or fire fighters," said John Holland, operations director of Rapid UK, a charitable search and rescue group.
They go through a rigorous two-year training process before they are allowed to assist in disasters.
"We try to deploy within 24 hours because the earlier we are on the ground, the better the chances of rescuing survivors," Holland said. "During the Pakistan earthquake [in 2005], we were able to deploy in 21 hours."
The International Search and Rescue Advisory Group (INSARAG) - a global network of more than 80 countries and disaster response organizations under the UN umbrella - has standardized guidelines for rescue missions.
"Once a government has made that call for international assistance, we alert our members, who begin mobilizing to travel to the area," said INSARAG's Winston Chang, a Singapore Civil Defence Force veteran who coordinated the search and rescue efforts following the recent earthquake in Padang, Indonesia. "We run a portal where once a disaster occurs, we pool information and our various teams can input data on their movements - whether they are on standby, mobilizing or have reached the ground."
Step one - coordination
The first thing is to activate search and rescue teams, often highly trained volunteers.
"Most of our members are doctors, ambulance operators, engineers or fire fighters," said John Holland, operations director of Rapid UK, a charitable search and rescue group.
They go through a rigorous two-year training process before they are allowed to assist in disasters.
"We try to deploy within 24 hours because the earlier we are on the ground, the better the chances of rescuing survivors," Holland said. "During the Pakistan earthquake [in 2005], we were able to deploy in 21 hours."
The International Search and Rescue Advisory Group (INSARAG) - a global network of more than 80 countries and disaster response organizations under the UN umbrella - has standardized guidelines for rescue missions.
"Once a government has made that call for international assistance, we alert our members, who begin mobilizing to travel to the area," said INSARAG's Winston Chang, a Singapore Civil Defence Force veteran who coordinated the search and rescue efforts following the recent earthquake in Padang, Indonesia. "We run a portal where once a disaster occurs, we pool information and our various teams can input data on their movements - whether they are on standby, mobilizing or have reached the ground."
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