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Safest region on Earth from natural disasters.... |
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| Nov13-12, 07:34 PM | #1 |
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Safest region on Earth from natural disasters....
My question is simple but may require a complicated answer. What region on earth is safest (note the word "safest") from natural disasters????
In the United States, there are plenty of tornadoes and hurricanes, along with the threat of earthquakes on the west coast (and east coast too!!!!). Not to mention that the supervolcano in yellowstone is the bomb waiting to explode and finish off North America. Europe also has it's supervolcano in Italy that could blow up soon and finish off Europe as we know it. So apart from our sun blowing up and the ultimate death of the universe, what region (or area) on earth seem safest from mass natural disasters????? I'm not much of a geology guy (I'm a math guy) so please have mercy when answering!!! Thanks. |
| Nov13-12, 07:51 PM | #2 |
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| Nov15-12, 02:04 PM | #3 |
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The one drawback for this area are the episodic periods of glacial ice which scour it, occasionally dropping erratics. These episodes tend to be widely spaced in time. |
| Nov15-12, 06:20 PM | #4 |
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Mentor
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Safest region on Earth from natural disasters....
No blizzards, no floods, no droughts, no insect crop infestations, no earthquakes, no storms, no volcanoes, no sinkholes, no temperature extremes. Can crops be grown, cattle raised?
Then if you find such a place, is it habitable for humans? Or are you just looking for a safe place where humans can't live? |
| Nov15-12, 07:27 PM | #5 |
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No place is perfect, but Ireland comes close. Flooding is a usually a local phenomenon. Stay away from rivers, creeks or low lying ground near the sea. The climate is milder than the UK except close to the west coast where winds off the ocean can be strong.
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| Nov15-12, 09:21 PM | #7 |
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The luck of the Irish.
We were there last year the west coast is amazing, incredibly windy. We went to the Cliffs of Mohr in a rainstorm and nearly got blown off the observation platform. Great trip, great place. |
| Nov15-12, 09:31 PM | #8 |
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| Nov15-12, 09:55 PM | #9 |
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| Nov15-12, 11:07 PM | #10 |
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As an aside the Irish Potato Famine was part of a larger European Potato famine that hit Ireland and Scotland particularly hard. The famine was made worse in Ireland by the absentee landlords who wanted crops grown and exported rather than kept in Ireland to feed the starving.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Potato_Famine |
| Nov15-12, 11:33 PM | #11 |
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| Nov16-12, 12:02 AM | #12 |
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| Nov16-12, 12:03 AM | #13 |
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| Nov16-12, 12:21 AM | #14 |
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My point is that the blight was a natural phenomenon, but need not have been a disaster; at least in Ireland. |
| Nov16-12, 03:13 AM | #15 |
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Maybe that this impression comes from some paleo biological studies and the tectonic history, as it has always being on lower lattitudes in that period. By the same token, however, we could have thought that of the Sahara, had we lived ten thousand years ago. So, with the apparant absence of a continuous fossil record of the last million years, it's equally likely that Malaysia also has been spending some time in the arid subsidence zones of the hadley cells, that forms deserts like the Sahara. Maybe only a few thousend years, which would only seem a negliblible hiatus on 100 million years. |
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