To classify: There are only five natural disasters in which higher numbers were measured.
- Strength 9.5 – Chile: According to the USGS, the strongest earthquake previously requested a total of 1,655 lives in May 1960 and makes two million people homeless. The natural disaster is also called a large Chilean earthquake.
- Strength 9.2 – Alaska (USA): The great earthquake of Alaska in March 1964 shows that severe earthquakes do not always result from severe earthquakes. According to USGS, it demands 130 human life, but causes damage of over $ 2 billion.
- Strength 9.1 – Sumatra (Indonesia): A huge seaquake on the island of Sumatra triggers huge tsunamis on Christmas 2004. They bring death and destruction on coasts of the Indian ocean. An estimated 230,000 people die – including more than 500 Germans.
- Strength 9.1 – Japan: A strong quake in front of the east coast of Japan and a subsequent tsunami set up severe destruction in March 2011 and lead to the disaster in the Fukushima nuclear power plant. Almost 16,000 people are killed.
- Strength 9.0 – Kamchatka (Russia): When the earth moves to the Russian Peninsula in November 1952, the USGS registered the first earthquake of strength 9. It triggers a tsunami that meets Hawaii and causes damage of over one million US dollars. Exact figures for deaths are not known. According to estimates, it should be at least 10,000.
Image: (APA/AFP/US Geological Survey/Handout)
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Image: (APA/AFP/US Geological Survey/Handout)
Source: Nachrichten