Top 11 Deadliest Natural Disasters in History
Top 11 Deadliest Natural Disasters in History
Top 11 Deadliest Natural Disasters in History
History
Deadly disasters
In the year after the quake, the government of Haiti estimated that the
magnitude-7.0 quake and its aftermath killed 230,000 people; in January
2011, officials revised the figure to 316,000. Those figures are highly
disputed, however. A 2010 study published in the journal Medicine,
Conflict and Survival put the number at around 160,000 deaths. A 2011
U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) draft report from
2011 claimed even lower numbers — between 46,000 and 85,000.
The disparities reflect the difficulty of counting deaths even in the modern
era, not to mention the political wrangling that goes on over "official"
numbers. Many critics of Haiti's estimates argue that the government
revised the death toll up in order to secure further international aid. On
the other side of the argument, according to the Columbia Journalism
Review, were those who accused USAID of leaking the report to discredit
the Haitian government.
2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami
According to a 2007 paper in The Medieval History Journal, the death toll
was higher than it would have been at other times of the year because the
city was full of tourists celebrating Ascension Day.
1839 India cyclone/1881 Haiphong typhoon