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Natural Disasters and Hazards

  • Disaster Relief and Recovery@
  • Education and Research
  • Multimedia
  • Preparedness
  • Warnings and Forecasts


  • Avalanches
  • Earthquakes@
  • Floods
  • Geologic Hazards@
  • Landslides@
  • Large Near Earth Object Impacts@
  • News and Media
  • Tsunami@
  • Volcanoes@
  • Weather Phenomena@
  • Wildfires

  • See also


    • A Procedure to Evaluate the Effectiveness of Two Watch Warning Systems
      Notes from this workshop on the effectiveness of heat related health watch systems.
    • American Experience: Fatal Flood
      Companion site to the PBS documentary about the 1927 flooding of the Mississippi River. Includes timeline, maps, profiles of people and events, teacher's guide, and info about the film.
    • CBS News Disaster Links
      Information about a variety of manmade and natural disaster-related websites. Quick reference and access to realtime data.
    • Cyclone of 1896 St. Louis, Missouri
      Photographic views of damage caused by cyclone of May 27, 1896.
    • Disaster Research Center
      Online publications, data, bibliographies, and other information relevant to the sociology of disasters.
    • Eyewitness to Disaster: California Earthquakes
      Collection of eyewitness accounts, humor, and pictures of historic California earthquakes.
    • Forces of Nature
      Educational information about natural phenomena and different natural disasters. Includes information about the causes of disasters as well as lists of the worst recorded type of each disaster.
    • Geo Monitor
      Links to websites about volcanos, earthquakes, tsunamis, landslides, hurricanes, thunderstorms, and floods.
    • HazNet
      Provides information on coastal natural hazards (such as hurricanes and shoreline erosion), hazard planning, and things that can be done to reduce personal and economic losses. From U.S. National Sea Grant College Program.
    • Hot Topics: Disasters
      New Scientist news and articles on some of the most feared natural disasters: fires, quakes, megafloods, tsunamis, meteors, mass extinctions.
    • Largest Earthquakes in the United States
      Maps and statistics from the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
    • Living Almanac of Disasters
      Almanac of historical disasters listed by date of the year.
    • National Climatic Data Center
      Severe weather records and natural disaster links.
    • Natural Disaster Management in India
      Government Department of Agriculture and Cooperation information resource, including reports on recent and current disasters and information on management initiatives.
    • Natural Disasters and Catastrophes
      About the causes, consequences and costs (if appropriate) of natural disasters and catastrophes. Includes specific commentary, features and statistics on a variety of subjects (i.e. volcanic activity) and a regularly updated listing of world-wide natural disasters effective January 1999.
    • ReliefWeb: Natural Disasters
      Archived information, from 1981 to the present, about major natural disasters, including floods, droughts, fires, earthquakes, hurricanes, and cyclones, focussing on international humanitarian relief efforts. From the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).
    • Societal Aspects of Weather
      Organization which measures the impact of weather on people.
    • Storm Events
      Storm database with records of US storms and tornados by county.
    • The Disaster Files
      Repository of summaries, statistics, links and articles about natural (and some man-made) disasters including earthquakes, tornados, hurricanes, floods, blizzards, epidemics, air crashes, explosions and volcanic eruptions.
    • The WWW Virtual Library: Hazards and Risk
      Natural and man-made disasters, preparedness, impacts, and mitigation.
    • Urban Survival Tools
      Natural disaster information, probability, statistics links and other information. Also provides survival kits and other survival products
    • Why the US Is Becoming More Vulnerable to Natural Disasters
      Despite increases in what we know about natural disasters and how to protect ourselves against them, population growth continues along the coasts, where loss of life and property from these disasters are greatest.
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