The_Absolute said:
Shortly after the year 2001, to now, there have been more increasingly violent earthquakes, hurricanes, tsunamis, tornadoes, etc... than in any other decade in history. I wanted to know if there is a natural, geological, and meteorological explanation for this. Not too long ago, there were Two massive earthquakes, happening on different continents, within less than 15 minutes apart from each other. What gives?
None of this is true. As has ben mentioned, people are living in areas of the world they haven't before, in greater concentrations, with more media coverage, measurents are being taken where they haven't been before. This is why someone would mistakenly assume that hurricanes, etc... have gotten worse, or that there are worse earthquakes. One simply has to look back on disasters like Vesuvius and Krakatoa to realize that we've had nothing of that nature happen in the last hundred years.
Ten deadliest natural disasters
Note: This list excludes diseases and famines, which would otherwise occupy the entire list.
Rank Year Event Location Date Death Toll (Estimate)
1. 1931 China floods China July-November 1931 1000000–4000000*[1]
2. 1887 Yellow River flood China September-October 1887 900000–2000000
3. 1556 Shaanxi earthquake Shaanxi Province China January 23 1556 830000
4. 1970 Bhola cyclone Bangladesh November 13 1970 500000
5. 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake/tsunami Indian Ocean December 26 2004 443929
6. 526 Antioch earthquake Antioch Byzantine Empire May 20 526 250000
7. 1976 Tangshan earthquake Tangshan Hebei China July 28 1976 242 000
8. 1920 Haiyuan earthquake Haiyuan Ningxia-Gansu China December 26 1920 240000
9. 1839 India Cyclone India November 25 1839 300000
10. 1975 Banqiao Dam flood Zhumadian Henan Province China August 7 1975 90000–230000
* Estimate by Nova's sources are close to 4 million and yet Encarta's sources report as few as 1 million. Expert estimates report wide variance.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_natural_disasters_by_death_toll