Safekipedia

Natural disaster

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

A view of Lac de l'Entonnoir during a dry period in October 2018, showing cracked mud around the shrinking lake.

A natural disaster is when something in nature hurts people or places. Natural events like avalanches, droughts, earthquakes, floods, heat waves, tropical cyclones, volcanic activity and wildfires can become disasters.

Economic loss risk for six natural disasters: tropical cyclones, droughts, earthquakes, floods, landslides, and volcanoes.

A natural disaster can hurt people or damage buildings and roads. How much damage happens depends on if people are ready for disasters and how strong buildings are.

Today, it can be hard to tell if a disaster is from nature or because of people. Choices about building, fires, and using land can make natural disasters worse. Climate change can also change how often extreme weather happens. Some places, especially developing countries, don’t have good plans to keep people safe, which makes disasters harder to handle.

Terminology

A natural disaster is when a natural event causes big problems for people and places. These events can include things like earthquakes, floods, droughts, and storms. When these happen, they can hurt people, damage buildings, and make life very hard for everyone affected.

The word "disaster" means when something happens that a community cannot handle on its own. Natural disasters are just one type of disaster; others can come from human actions or technology. For example, an earthquake is a natural hazard. But when it hits a place and causes a lot of damage, it becomes a disaster. This shows that while natural events can happen, how badly they affect us often depends on how we prepare and what we do to keep ourselves safe.

Scale

Main articles: List of natural disasters by death toll and List of countries by natural disaster risk

Number of recorded natural disaster events (1900–2022)

By region and country

Some places face more natural disasters than others. Countries like the Bahamas, Haiti, Zimbabwe, and Armenia have been hurt by natural disasters.

The Asia-Pacific area has the most natural disasters. People there are more likely to face a natural disaster than people in other parts of the world.

From 1995 to 2015, the most natural disasters happened in America, China, and India. In 2012, there were many natural disasters around the world, and most of them were weather-related, like storms or floods.

Countries that are still developing often don’t have the best systems to warn people about disasters or to help them prepare. This makes them more likely to suffer when disasters happen.

Impacts

A natural disaster can harm people, damage buildings, and disrupt daily life. It may cause injuries and problems for communities and the economy.

Global death rate from natural disasters (1900–2022)

Natural disasters can also hurt the environment. During these events, waste management becomes harder, and lots of waste can be created quickly. This can pollute areas and make health problems worse.

Disasters can affect different groups of people in unequal ways. It is important for communities to support everyone affected and work together to recover.

Disasters caused by geological hazards

Landslides

See also: List of landslides and List of avalanches

Avalanches

Earthquakes

Main article: Earthquake

See also: Lists of earthquakes and Soil liquefaction

An earthquake happens when energy suddenly bursts out in the Earth's crust, making the ground shake. Earthquakes occur because of movements along cracks called faults. Most of the time, earthquakes themselves don't hurt people; it's what they cause next, like buildings falling down, fires starting, big waves called tsunamis, or volcanic eruptions, that can be dangerous. Better buildings, safety plans, and early warnings can help protect people.

Sinkholes

Main article: Sinkhole

See also: List of sinkholes

A sinkhole is a hole that forms when the ground collapses. This can happen when the ground is weakened by natural processes or human activities like digging, causing the surface to sink or break open.

Coastal erosion

See also: Coastal management, Coastal and oceanic landforms, Coastal development hazards, Coastal geography, Coastal engineering, Coastal morphodynamics, and Bioerosion

Coastal erosion is when the land along coastlines wears away. Waves, currents, and storms can move the land, changing the shape of beaches and shores. This can damage buildings, roads, and other things people use near the coast.

Volcanic eruptions

Global number of deaths from earthquake (1960–2017)

See also: Types of volcanic eruptions and List of largest volcanic eruptions

Volcanoes can cause a lot of damage in different ways. The eruption itself can throw rocks and ash into the air. Lava flows from volcanoes can destroy anything in its path because of its intense heat. Volcanic ash can fall like a thick blanket. Ash can also hurt people if they breathe it in.

Tsunami

Main article: Tsunami

See also: List of historical tsunamis

A tsunami is a big series of waves in the ocean or a large lake caused when a lot of water is suddenly moved. This can happen after undersea earthquakes, landslides under the water, or volcanic eruptions. Tsunamis can travel very far and cause flooding and damage when they reach land.

Disasters caused by extreme weather hazards

Because of changes in our climate, some weather-related disasters are happening more often and with greater strength. This includes heat waves, droughts, wildfires, and flooding from coastal areas.

Hot and dry conditions

Heat waves

Main article: Heat wave

See also: List of heat waves

A heat wave is a time when the weather is unusually and very hot. In the past, heat waves were rare, but now many places are seeing hotter temperatures more often. This has led to more wildfires in forests and dangers to cities.

Droughts

Main article: Drought

A wildfire in California.

See also: List of droughts

Droughts are long periods with very little rain. One famous drought happened in Australia from 1997 to 2009, causing water problems across the country. In 2011, the whole state of Texas had drought conditions all year, which hurt the economy and caused big fires.

Wildfires

Main article: Wildfire

See also: List of forest fires

Wildfires are huge fires that often start in areas far from towns. They can begin from natural causes like lightning or from human mistakes. Wildfires can spread to places where people live, putting homes and animals at risk.

Storms and heavy rain

Floods

The Limpopo River during the 2000 Mozambique flood

Main article: Flood

See also: List of floods

A flood happens when water covers land that is usually dry. This can happen when rivers or lakes overflow, or when heavy rain fills up normal water areas. Floods can damage homes, roads, and farms.

Thunderstorms

Main articles: Thunderstorm and Lightning

Strong storms can create lightning, which can damage buildings and start fires. Lightning can also be dangerous to people outside. Most lightning-related dangers happen in places where storms are common and homes aren’t very strong.

Tropical cyclone

See also: Tropical cyclones and climate change

Typhoon, cyclone, cyclonic storm and hurricane are different names for the same kind of big storm that forms over the ocean. These storms have strong winds, lots of rain, and thunderstorms. The name depends on where the storm happens: hurricanes in the Atlantic and Northeast Pacific, typhoons in the Northwest Pacific, and cyclones in the South Pacific and Indian Ocean. Big storms like Hurricane Katrina have caused lots of damage to places like the United States.

Tornadoes

See also: List of tornadoes and tornado outbreaks

A tornado is a powerful spinning wind that touches the ground. It can be very dangerous, with winds that can blow things away. Tornadoes can look like funnels and come alone or in groups with many storms.

Cold-weather events

See also: Ice storm and Cold wave

Blizzards

Main article: Blizzard

Blizzards are big winter storms with lots of snow and strong winds. They can hurt farming and other work, especially where snow isn’t common. Some famous blizzards include one in the United States in 1888 and another in Iran in 1972.

Hailstorms

Main article: Hail

See also: List of costly or deadly hailstorms

Hail is ice that falls from thunderstorms. Hailstones can be small or big and can damage farms, crops, and equipment. One costly hailstorm happened in Munich, Germany, in 1984.

Multi-hazard analysis

Natural dangers like earthquakes, wildfires, and floods each behave differently. Sometimes, one danger can lead to another. For example, an earthquake might cause landslides, or a wildfire might make future landslides more likely.

Experts look at all possible dangers and how they might affect each other. This helps communities get ready and stay safe. Some risks, like those from earthquakes or strong winds, are easier to understand, while others are still being learned about.

Responses

Main articles: Disaster response and Emergency management

Disaster management is an important job for civil protection (or civil defense) groups. It helps with four main steps: stopping disasters before they happen, responding when they occur, getting better after, and getting ready for the future.

Mitigation and prevention

Disaster risk reduction

Response

Recovery

Preparedness

Society and culture

International law

The 1951 Refugee Convention and its 1967 Protocol help protect people who must leave their homes due to dangerous events. The 1998 UN Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement and the 2009 Kampala Convention also aim to keep people safe when they are moved from their homes by natural disasters.

Images

Chart showing how much money different parts of the world spend to fix damage from storms, floods, and other natural disasters.
A powerful sandstorm sweeping across the dry landscape of Somaliland in East Africa.
A cornfield affected by drought in Texas, showing how dry weather impacts crops.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Natural disaster, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

Images from Wikimedia Commons. Tap any image to view credits and license.