List of natural disasters by death toll




A natural disaster is a sudden event that causes widespread destruction, major collateral damage or loss of life, brought about by forces other than the acts of human beings. A natural disaster might be caused by earthquakes, flooding, volcanic eruption, landslide, hurricanes etc. In order to be classified as a disaster, it will have profound environmental effect and/or human loss and frequently incurs financial loss.




Contents






  • 1 Ten deadliest natural disasters


  • 2 Ten deadliest natural disasters since 1900


  • 3 Lists of natural disasters by cause


    • 3.1 Deadliest earthquakes


    • 3.2 Deadliest famines


    • 3.3 Deadliest impact events


    • 3.4 Deadliest limnic eruptions


    • 3.5 Deadliest wildfires / bushfires


    • 3.6 Ten deadliest avalanches / landslides


    • 3.7 Ten deadliest blizzards


    • 3.8 Ten deadliest floods


    • 3.9 Ten deadliest heat waves


    • 3.10 Ten deadliest pandemics / epidemics


    • 3.11 Ten deadliest tornadoes


    • 3.12 Ten deadliest tropical cyclones


    • 3.13 Ten deadliest tsunamis


    • 3.14 Ten deadliest volcanic eruptions




  • 4 See also


  • 5 Notes


  • 6 References


  • 7 External links





Ten deadliest natural disasters


Notes: The list does not include several volcanic eruptions with uncertain death tolls resulting from collateral effects (crop failures, etc.), though these may have numbered in the millions; see List of volcanic eruptions by death toll.
The list does not include the man-made 1938 Yellow River flood, caused entirely by a deliberate man-made act (an act of war, destroying dikes).
An alternative listing is given by Peter Hough in his 2008 book
Global Security.[1]














































































Rank
Death toll (estimate)
Event
Location
Date
1.

1,000,000–4,000,000[2][nb 1]

1931 China floods
China

July 1931
2.

900,000–2,000,000[3]

1887 Yellow River flood
China

September 1887
3.

830,000[4]

1556 Shaanxi earthquake
China

January 23, 1556
4.
500,000[2]

1970 Bhola cyclone

East Pakistan (now Bangladesh)

November 13, 1970
5.

316,000

2010 Haiti earthquake
Haiti

January 12, 2010
6.

300,000

1839 India cyclone[5]
India

November 26, 1839

1737 Calcutta cyclone[6]
India

October 7, 1737
8.
273,400[7]

1920 Haiyuan earthquake
China

December 16, 1920
9.

250,000–300,000[8]

526 Antioch earthquake

Byzantine Empire (now Turkey)

May 526
10.

242,769–655,000

1976 Tangshan earthquake
China

July 28, 1976


Ten deadliest natural disasters since 1900


Note: This list does not include industrial or technological accidents, epidemics, or the 1938 Yellow River flood.
















































































Rank
Death toll (estimate)
Event*
Location
Date
1.

1,000,000–4,000,000

1931 China floods
China

July 1931
2.
500,000[2]

1970 Bhola cyclone

East Pakistan (now Bangladesh)

November 1970
3.

316,000[9]

2010 Haiti earthquake
Haiti

January 12, 2010
4.

273,400

1920 Haiyuan earthquake
China

December 16, 1920
5.

242,769–655,000

1976 Tangshan earthquake
China

July 28, 1976
6.

229,000

Typhoon Nina—contributed to Banqiao Dam failure
China

August 7, 1975
7.

227,898

2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami

Indian Ocean

December 26, 2004
8.

145,000

1935 Yangtze river flood
China

1935
9.

143,000

1923 Great Kantō earthquake
Japan

September 1, 1923
10.

138,866

1991 Bangladesh cyclone
Bangladesh

April 1991


Lists of natural disasters by cause



Deadliest earthquakes



  • Note that the 893 Ardabil earthquake is a 'phantom', considered a mis-recording of the 893 Dvin earthquake[10]
































































































































































































































































































































Rank
Death toll (estimate)
Event
Location
Date
1.

830,000

1556 Shaanxi earthquake

Ming Dynasty (now China)

January 23, 1556
2.

316,000

2010 Haiti earthquake

Haiti

January 12, 2010
3.

242,769–655,000[11]

1976 Tangshan earthquake

China

July 28, 1976
4.

273,400[7]

1920 Haiyuan earthquake

Ningxia, Republic of China (now China)

December 16, 1920
5.

250,000–300,000[8]

526 Antioch earthquake

Byzantine Empire (now Turkey)

May 526
6.

260,000[12]

115 Antioch earthquake

Roman Empire (now Turkey)

December 13, 115
7.

230,000

1138 Aleppo earthquake

Zengid dynasty (now Syria)

October 11, 1138
8.

227,898

2004 Indian Ocean earthquake

Indonesia

December 26, 2004
9.

200,000

1303 Hongdong earthquake[13]

Mongol Empire (now China)

September 17, 1303

856 Damghan earthquake

Abbasid Caliphate (now Iran)

December 22, 856
1780 Tabriz earthquake[14]

Iran

January 8, 1780
12.

150,000

893 Ardabil earthquake

Abbasid Caliphate (now Iran)

March 23, 893
13.

142,807[15][16]

1923 Great Kantō earthquake

Japan

September 1, 1923
14.

130,000[17]
533 Aleppo earthquake

Byzantine Empire (now Syria)

November 29, 533
15.

123,000[2]

1908 Messina earthquake

Italy

December 28, 1908
16.

110,000

1948 Ashgabat earthquake

Turkmen SSR, Soviet Union (now Turkmenistan)

October 5, 1948
17.

100,000

1290 Chihli earthquake

Mongol Empire (now China)

September 27, 1290
18.

87,587[18][19]

2008 Sichuan earthquake

China

May 12, 2008
19.

87,351

2005 Kashmir earthquake[citation needed]

Pakistan (Azad Kashmir)

October 8, 2005
20.

80,000

1721 Tabriz earthquake[20]

Iran

April 26, 1721
458 Antioch earthquake[21]

Byzantine Empire (now Turkey)

September 458

1667 Shamakhi earthquake

Safavid dynasty (now Azerbaijan)

November 1667

1854 Great Nankaidō earthquake

Japan

November 1854
1169 Aleppo earthquake[22][23]

Zengid dynasty (now Syria)

1169
25.

77,000

1727 Tabriz earthquake

Iran

November 18, 1727
26.

73,000[24]
1718 Gansu earthquake

Qing Empire (now China)

June 19, 1718
27.

70,000

1970 Ancash earthquake[25]

Peru

May 31, 1970
1033 Ramala earthquake[26]

Fatimid Caliphate (now West Bank)

December 10, 1033
847 Damascus earthquake[27]

Abbasid Caliphate (now Syria)

847

1868 Ecuador earthquakes[28]

Ecuador

August 15, 1868August 16, 1868
31.

60,000
587 Antioch earthquake[29]

Byzantine Empire (now Turkey)

September 30, 587
1101 Khorasan earthquake[30]

Great Seljuq Empire (now Iran)

1101

1268 Cilicia earthquake

Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia (now Turkey)

1268

1693 Sicily earthquake

Kingdom of Sicily (now Italy)

January 11, 1693

1935 Quetta earthquake

India (now part of Pakistan)

May 31, 1935
36.

50,000
844 Damascus earthquake[31]

Abbasid Caliphate (now Syria)

September 18, 844
1042 Tabriz earthquake[32]

Abbasid Caliphate (now Iran)

November 4, 1042

1783 Calabrian earthquakes

Kingdom of Naples (now Italy)

1783

1990 Manjil–Rudbar earthquake

Iran

June 21, 1990
40.

40,000–50,000[33]

1755 Lisbon earthquake

Portugal

November 1, 1755
41.

45,000
850 Iran earthquake[34]

Abbasid Caliphate (now Iran)

July 15, 850
856 Corinth earthquake[35]

Byzantine Empire (now Greece)

November 856
856 Tunisia earthquake[36][37]

Abbasid Caliphate (now Tunisia)

December 3, 856
44.

42,571[38]
1668 Shandong earthquake

Qing Empire (now China)

July 25, 1668
45.
40,900
1927 Gulang earthquake

Gansu, China

May 22, 1927
46.

40,000
342 Antioch earthquake[39]

Roman Empire (now Turkey)

342
662 Damghan earthquake[40]

Umayyad Caliphate (now Iran)

April 26, 662
1455 Naples earthquake[41]

Crown of Aragon (now Italy)

December 5, 1455
1754 Cairo earthquake[42]

Ottoman Empire (now Egypt)

September 2, 1754
1755 Tabriz earthquake[43]

Iran

June 7, 1755

1797 Riobamba earthquake

Spanish Empire (now Ecuador)

February 4, 1797




Deadliest famines



Note: Some of these famines may have been caused or partially caused by humans.




























































































































































































Rank
Death toll
Event
Location
Date
1.
15,000,000–43,000,000

Great Chinese Famine

China

1958–1961
2.
25,000,000[citation needed]
Chinese Famine of 1907

China

1907–1911
3.
9,000,000–13,000,000[44]

Northern Chinese Famine of 1876–1879

China

1876–1879
4.
11,000,000

Chalisa famine

India

1783–1784

Doji bara famine or Skull famine

India

1789–1793
6.
10,000,000

Bengal famine of 1770, incl. Bihar & Orissa

British India

1769–1773
7.
7,500,000

Great European Famine

Europe (all)

1315–1317
8.
7,400,000

Deccan famine of 1630–32

India

1630–1632
9.
5,000,000–8,000,000

Soviet famine of 1932–1933 (Holodomor in Ukraine)

Soviet Union

1932–1933
10.
5,500,000
Indian Great Famine of 1876–78

British India

1876–1878
11.
5,000,000
Chinese Famine of 1936

China

1936

Russian famine of 1921

Russia, Ukraine

1921–1922
13.
3,000,000 Chinese famine of 1928–1930 China
1928–1930
14.
2,000,000–3,000,000

Chinese famine of 1942–43

China

1942–1943
15.
2,400,000

Javanese famine

Japanese Java

1944–1945
16.
2,000,000

Russian famine of 1601–1603

Russia (Muscovy)

1601–1603
Deccan famine of 1702–1704

India

1702–1704

Upper Doab famine of 1860–61

British India

1860–1861
Indian Famine

British India

1896–1902

Persian famine of 1917–1919

Persia

1917–1918
Famine during the Biafran War

Nigeria

1967–1970
22.
1,500,000–3,000,000

Bengal famine of 1943

British India

1943–1944
23.
1,500,000

Rajputana famine of 1869

British India

1868–1870

Persian famine of 1870–1872

Persia

1870–1872
25.
1,300,000–1,500,000
French Famine

France

1693–1694
26.
1,000,000–1,500,000

Great Irish Famine

Ireland

1846–1849

Soviet famine of 1946–47

Soviet Union

1946–1947
28.
1,000,000

Orissa famine of 1866

British India

1866


Deadliest impact events



Note: Although there have been no scientifically verified cases of astronomical objects resulting in human fatalities, there have been several reported occurrences throughout human history. Consequently, the casualty figures for all events listed are considered unofficial.





















































































Rank
Death toll (unofficial)
Location
Date
Notes
1.
10,000+

Qingyang, Gansu, China
1490

1490 Ch'ing-yang event
2.

"Tens"

Changshou District, Chongqing, China
1639
10 homes destroyed[45][46]
3.
10+
China
616 CE
a large meteorite fell onto the rebel Lu Ming-Yueh's camp, destroying a wall-attacking tower[46]
4.
2

Malacca ship, Indian Ocean
1648
2 sailors killed on board a ship[46]

Podkamennaya Tunguska River, Siberia, Russian Empire
1908

Tunguska event[45]
6.
1

Cremona, Lombardy, Italy
1511
a monk and several animals were killed by stones weighing up to 50 kg[46]

Milan, Lombardy, Italy
1633 or 1664
a monk died after being struck on the thigh by a meteorite[46]

Gascony, France
1790
a farmer was reportedly struck and killed by a meteorite[46]
Oriang, Malwate, India
1825

[45][47]
Chin-kuei Shan, China
1874
a cottage was crushed by a meteorite, killing a child[45][48]

Newtown, Indiana, United States
1879
a man was killed in bed by a meteorite[45]

Dun-le-Poëlier, France
1879
a farmer was killed by a meteorite[45]
Zvezvan, Yugoslavia
1929
a meteorite hit a bridal party[45]


Deadliest limnic eruptions



Note: Only 2 cases in recorded history.
























Rank
Death toll
Event
Location
Date
1.
1,744

Lake Nyos disaster

Cameroon
August 21, 1986
2.
37

Lake Monoun disaster

Cameroon
August 15, 1984


Deadliest wildfires / bushfires


























































































































































































Rank
Death toll
Event
Location
Date
1.
1,200–2,500

Peshtigo Fire

Wisconsin, United States

October 8, 1871
2.
1,200

Kursha-2 Fire

Soviet Union

August 3, 1936
3.
453

Cloquet Fire[49]

Minnesota, United States

October 12, 1918
4.
418+

Great Hinckley Fire

Minnesota, United States

September 1, 1894
5.
282

Thumb Fire

Michigan, United States

September 5, 1881
6.
240

1997 Indonesian forest fires[50][51]

Sumatra and Kalimantan, Indonesia

September 1997
7.
223

Matheson Fire

Ontario, Canada

July 29, 1916
8.
191

Black Dragon Fire[50][51]

China and Soviet Union

May 1, 1987
9.
180

Black Saturday bushfires[50][51]

Australia

February 7, 2009
10.
160–300

Miramichi Fire

Canada

October 7, 1825
11.
100

2018 Attica wildfires

Greece

July 23, 2018
12.
87

Great Fire of 1910

Montana and Idaho, United States

August 20, 1910
13.
85

Camp Fire[52]

California, United States

November 8, 2018
14.
84

2007 Greek forest fires[50]

Greece

June 28, 2007
15.
82

1949 Landes forest fire

France

August 19, 1949
16.
75

Ash Wednesday bushfires[50]

Australia

February 16, 1983
17.
73–200

Great Porcupine Fire

Canada

July 11, 1911
18.
71

Black Friday bushfires

Australia

January 13, 1939
19.
66

2017 Portugal wildfires

Portugal

June 17, 2017
20.
65+

Yacolt Burn[53][54]

Washington and Oregon, United States

September 8, 1902
21.
62

1967 Tasmanian fires

Australia

February 7, 1967
22.
60

1926 Victorian bushfires

Australia

January 26, 1926
23.
57
1991 Indonesian forest fires[50]

Indonesia

August 1991
24.
56
1992 Nepal wildfires[50]

Nepal

March 1992
25.
54

2010 Russian wildfires[50]

Russia

July 29, 2010


Ten deadliest avalanches / landslides













































































Rank
Death toll (estimate)
Event
Location
Date
1.

100,000
1786 Dadu River landslide dam; triggered by the 1786 Kangding-Luding earthquake[55]

China

1786
1920 Haiyuan landslides; triggered by the 1920 Haiyuan earthquake[55]
China

1920
3.

22,000
1970 Huascarán avalanche; triggered by the 1970 Ancash earthquake[56]

Peru

1970
4.

10,000–30,000

Vargas tragedy[57]

Venezuela
1999

10,000

White Friday avalanches[58][59]
Italy

1916
6.

5,000–28,000

Khait landslide[60][61]

Tajikistan

1949
7.

4,000–6,000
1941 Huaraz avalanche[62]
Peru

1941

4,000
1962 Huascarán avalanche[56]
Peru

1962
9.

3,466
1310 Western Hubei landslide[55]
China

1310
10.

3,429

1933 Diexi landslides[55]
China

1933


Ten deadliest blizzards

















































































Rank
Death toll (estimate)
Event
Location
Date
1.

4,000

1972 Iran blizzard

Iran

1972
2.

3,000

Carolean Death March

Norway

1719
3.

926

2008 Afghanistan blizzard

Afghanistan

2008
4.

400

Great Blizzard of 1888

United States

1888
5.

353

Great Appalachian Storm of 1950

United States

1950
6.

318

1993 Storm of the Century

United States

1993
7.

286

December 1960 nor'easter

United States

1960
8.

250

Great Lakes Storm of 1913
United States and Canada (Great Lakes region)

1913
9.

235

Schoolhouse Blizzard

United States

1888
10.

201

North American blizzard of 1966

United States

1966


Ten deadliest floods



Note: Some of these floods and landslides may be partially caused by humans – for example, by failure of dams, levees, seawalls or retaining walls.
This list does not include the man-made 1938 Yellow River flood caused entirely by a deliberate man-made act (an act of war, destroying dikes).
















































































Rank
Death toll
Event
Location
Date
1.
1,000,000–4,000,000[63]

1931 China floods

China
1931
2.
900,000–2,000,000

1887 Yellow River (Huang He) flood

China
1887
3.
229,000[64]
Failure of 62 dams, the largest of which was Banqiao Dam, result of Typhoon Nina. China 1975
4.
145,000

1935 Yangtze river flood

China
1935
5.
>100,000

St. Felix's Flood, storm surge

Holy Roman Empire
1530
6.
100,000

Hanoi and Red River Delta flood

North Vietnam
1971
7.
up to 100,000[citation needed]
1911 Yangtze River flood

China
1911
8.
50,000–80,000

St. Lucia's flood, storm surge

Holy Roman Empire
1287
9.
60,000

North Sea flood, storm surge

Holy Roman Empire
1212
10.
36,000

St. Marcellus flood, storm surge

Holy Roman Empire
1219


Ten deadliest heat waves



Note: Measuring the number of deaths caused by a heat wave requires complicated statistical analysis, since heat waves tend to cause large numbers of deaths among people weakened by other conditions. As a result, the number of deaths is only known with any accuracy for heat waves in the modern era in countries with developed healthcare systems.
















































































Rank
Death toll
Event
Location
Date
1.
70,000

2003 European heat wave

Europe
2003
2.
56,000

2010 Russian heat wave

Russia
2010
3.
9,500

1901 eastern United States heat wave

United States
1901
4.
5,000–10,000

1988 United States heat wave

United States
1988
5.
3,418

2006 European heat wave

Europe
2006[65]
6.
2,541
1998 India heat wave

India
1998[65]
7.
2,500

2015 Indian heat wave

India
2015
8.
2,000

2015 Pakistan heat wave

Pakistan
2015
9.
1,700–5,000

1980 United States heat wave

United States
1980
10.
1,718[66]

2010 Japanese heat wave

Japan
2010


Ten deadliest pandemics / epidemics



Death counts are historical totals unless indicated otherwise.
















































































Rank
Death toll (estimate)
Event
Location
Date
1.

300,000,000 approx.

Smallpox
Worldwide

1900 to eradication.[67] Declared eradicated May 8, 1980.[68] 300 million smallpox deaths between 1900 and eradication would mean that, out of 4,713,503,215 worldwide deaths between 1900 and 1995,[69] 6.36% were from smallpox. Applied to the estimated total of ca. 95 billion deaths between 50000 BC and 1900,[70] this would mean that over 6 billion deaths in this period were from smallpox.
2.

200,000,000

Measles
Worldwide

last 150 years[71]
3.

100,000,000 approx.

Black Death
Worldwide

1331–1820
4.

80,000,000250,000,000

Malaria
Worldwide

20th century – present[update].

The World Health Report 1999 (WHO) states that “during the first half of the 20th century, the world sustained around 2 million deaths from malaria each year,” so for that period alone, there were a hundred million deaths. After that, mortality was halved by better treatment and eradication efforts, so we’ll add another 64 million deaths.[72]


5.

50,000,000100,000,000

Spanish flu
Worldwide

1918–1920
6.

40,000,000100,000,000

Plague of Justinian

Asia, Europe, Africa

540–590
7.

40,000,000100,000,000

Tuberculosis
Worldwide

20th century – present[update].[71] There were about 1 billion worldwide deaths from TB in the 19th and 20th centuries.[73] At the turn of the 19th Century there were 7 million worldwide annual deaths from TB.[74] Projected to the whole century, this would mean ca. 700 million tuberculosis deaths in the 19th Century, leaving 300 million deaths for the 20th Century. There were 5,000,000 worldwide deaths from TB per year in, respectively, 1939[75] and 1954.[76]
8.

30,000,000[77]

AIDS pandemic
Worldwide

1960–present
9.

12,000,000

Third Pandemic of Bubonic Plague
Worldwide

1855–1960
10.

5,000,000

Antonine Plague

Roman Empire

165–180


Ten deadliest tornadoes













































































Rank
Death toll
Event
Location
Date
1.
1,300
The Daulatpur–Saturia tornado

Manikganj, Bangladesh
1989
2.
695
The Tri-State tornado

United States (Missouri–Illinois–Indiana)
1925
3.
681
1973 Dhaka tornado

Bangladesh
1973
4.
660
1969 East Pakistan tornado

East Pakistan (now Bangladesh)
1969
5.
600
The Valletta, Malta tornado

Malta
1551 or 1556
6.
500
The Sicily Tornadoes

Sicily, Two Sicilies (now Italy)
1851
The Narail-Magura tornado

Jessore, East Pakistan, Pakistan (now Bangladesh)
1964
The Madaripur-Shibchar tornado

Bangladesh
1977
9.
400
The Ivanovo-Yaroslavl tornado

Soviet Union (now Russia)
1984
10.
317
The Great Natchez tornado

United States (Mississippi–Louisiana)
1840


Ten deadliest tropical cyclones



Note: Earlier versions of this list have included the so-called 'Bombay Cyclone of 1882' in tenth position, but this supposed event has been proven to be a hoax.







































































Rank
Death toll
Event
Location
Date
1.
≥500,000

1970 Bhola cyclone

East Pakistan (now Bangladesh)

November 13, 1970
2.

300,000

1737 Calcutta cyclone[6]

India

October 7, 1737

1839 India Cyclone[5]

India

November 25, 1839
4.
229,000

Super Typhoon Nina—contributed to Banqiao Dam failure

China

August 7, 1975
5.
200,000[78]

Great Backerganj Cyclone of 1876

India (now Bangladesh)

October 30, 1876
6.
150,000 (30,000 to 300,000)[79]

1881 Haiphong Typhoon

Vietnam

October 8, 1881
7.
138,866

1991 Bangladesh cyclone

Bangladesh

April 29, 1991
8.
138,373

Cyclone Nargis

Myanmar

May 2, 2008
9.
100,000
July 1780 typhoon[80]

Philippines

1780


Ten deadliest tsunamis



Note: A possible tsunami in 1782 that caused about 40,000 deaths in the Taiwan Strait area may have been of "meteorological" origin (a cyclone).[81]
















































































Rank
Death toll
Event
Location
Date
1.

227,898

2004 Indian Ocean tsunami

Indian Ocean

December 26, 2004
2.

123,000[2]

1908 Messina earthquake

Italy

December 28, 1908
3.

36,417–120,000

1883 eruption of Krakatoa

Indonesia

August 26, 1883
4.

40,000–50,000[33]

1755 Lisbon earthquake

Portugal

November 1, 1755
5.

30,000-100,000 (est.)

Minoan Eruption

Greece

2nd Millennium BC
6.

31,000

1498 Meiō Nankaidō earthquake

Japan

September 20, 1498
7.

30,000

1707 Hōei earthquake

Japan

October 28, 1707
8.

27,122[82]

1896 Sanriku earthquake

Japan

June 15, 1896
9.

25,674

1868 Arica earthquake

Chile

August 13, 1868
10.

5,700[83]–50,000[84]

365 Crete earthquake

Greece

July 21, 365


Ten deadliest volcanic eruptions

















































































Rank
Death toll
Event
Location
Date
1.
71,000+[85]

1815 eruption of Mount Tambora (see also Year Without a Summer)

Indonesia

April 10, 1815
2.
36,000+[86]

1883 eruption of Krakatoa

Indonesia

August 26, 1883
3.
30,000[87]
Mount Pelée
Martinique

May 7, 1902
4.
23,000[88]
Armero tragedy
Colombia

November 13, 1985
5.
15,000[89]

1792 Unzen earthquake and tsunami

Japan

May 21, 1792
6.
10,000

Mount Kelud

Indonesia

1586
7.
6,000[90]

Santa Maria

Guatemala

October 24, 1902
8.
5,000[91]

Mount Kelud

Indonesia

May 19, 1919
9.
4,011[92]

Mount Galunggung

Indonesia

1822
10.
3,500

El Chichón

Mexico

1982


See also




  • List of countries by natural disaster risk

  • List of all known deadly earthquakes since 1900

  • List of disasters in Canada

  • List of disasters in Indonesia

  • List of disasters in the Philippines

  • List of disasters in Thailand

  • List of natural disasters in Great Britain and Ireland

  • List of natural disasters in Haiti

  • List of natural disasters in New Zealand

  • List of natural disasters in Pakistan

  • List of natural disasters in the United States

  • Lists of nuclear disasters and radioactive incidents

  • Global catastrophic risk


Other lists organized by death toll


  • List of wars and anthropogenic disasters by death toll

  • List of accidents and disasters by death toll

  • List of battles and other violent events by death toll

  • List of disasters in Antarctica by death toll

  • List of disasters in Australia by death toll

  • List of disasters in Canada by death toll

  • List of disasters in Croatia by death toll

  • List of disasters in Great Britain and Ireland by death toll

  • List of disasters in New Zealand by death toll

  • List of disasters in Poland by death toll

  • List of disasters in Romania by death toll

  • List of disasters in the United States by death toll

  • Tsunamis affecting the British Isles



Notes





  1. ^ Estimate by Novas sources are close to 4 million and yet Encarta's sources report as few as 1 million. Expert estimates report wide variance.




References





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External links




  • Natural Hazards Data from NOAA National Geophysical Data Center


  • "When Nature Attacks" from Newsweek

  • World's worst natural disasters since 1900


  • Earthquake Hazards Program – USGS


  • EM-DAT: The International Disaster Database managed by the Centre for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters


  • Disasters Database Report from Emergency Management Australia









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