These disasters changed the world forever. For this list, we’re looking at the most devastating and deadly storms, earthquakes, tsunamis, floods, mudslides, heat waves and other natural phenomena the planet experienced from 2010 to 2019. Our countdown includes the 2019 Australian Wildfires, The Gorkha Earthquake, The Haiti Earthquake, and more! Let us know in the comments which of these events you’ll always remember.
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Click here to watch the 10 Worst Natural Disasters of the 90s: kzhead.info/sun/iKqIm9B7hpOjn40/bejne.html Let us know in the comments which of these events you’ll always remember, and if there are any others we should have mentioned.
Sup Mojo
Japan's triple disaster.
The Australian Wildfires
Hurricane Patricia and Mexico's 2017 earthquake.
Oh, man. I can't believe that the 2011 Tohuku earthquake and tsunami hit Honshu very hard. I feel so sorry for the people of Japan.
Those who died after the worst natural disasters in 2010s, may they rest in peace.
Atleast they not suffering covid 19, that what most of us say, 2020 is the worst years like come on. Covid 19 is the worst thing ever happen in human history, it's show us how most of us ignore the fact that in the past in worst than now
@@ironmetea308 dont forget about the black death in the 14th century, covid is still nothing compared to that, literally killed almost half of the world, there are still alot of events that are worse than covid in human history, yet I do agree covid is the worst in MODERN human history
@@flynnegan2880 it's years a lot of people say 2020 is the worst year in human history, but remember when 6nd century, know as the worst day worst than plague death. But now we human become ignorance and selfish.
@@ironmetea308 humans were always ignorant and selfish.
@@slinkbradshaw8674 that's true
Never forget the Tohoku Earthquake & Tsunami back in 2011.
Never forget
Second worst in history and unlike Chernobyl it’s radiation is seeping into the ocean poisoning the water around it and the drift currents it finds its way into. It was so bad California got an uptick of like .2 reotgen (radiation/rads)in its ocean water. I highly recommend looking up the history it’s a fascinating story and like Chernobyl it’s story ant done.
I lived through hurricane Maria in PR and didn’t get power until 2 months later and still was in my senior year of college. It was hard but we got through it.
I moved to the US months before and after the hurricane I wasn’t able to contact my mom or family for 1 or 2 weeks and my sister was in Ohio giving birth the morning of the hurricane and my family didn’t out how the birth went until those 1 or 2 weeks after the hurricane, when my mom was able to contact me for a minute, because the signal kept breaking up, and i told her the birth went alright.
I was there too, and didn’t get power till December I believe. I still havent fully recovered from it honestly, especially since the day of my birthday, Trump came here and had the audacity to kick us when we were down.
@@CinemageddonReviews manly because your leaders were putting the relief food and water in warehouses then blaming him for fucking things up.
Australian Wildfire 2019 and Japan Tsunami 2011 was a tough one.
The wild fire worent that bad compete to the size of the country
@@GojosBackHand Seriously? Tell that to all the victims.
@@midnite_rambler it's true Compare it to philippines and indonesia's, yeah, not that worse
@@midnite_rambler and by "not worse", i mean, AUSTRALIA one, not japanese one
@@GojosBackHand The size of fires was more than the California and the amazon rainforest fires combined. Also don't forget that large parts of Australia is desert. Most live on the coast. Many animals here don't live elsewhere, some wiped out. This isn't a competition. All were tragic. Hence why they were all listed.
I'm from the Philippines when Super Typhoon Haiyan ravaged our country. I was living in the Eastern part of the Philippines when Haiyan made the landfall. It was so strong so much that it blew up the roof of the garage, destroy several coconut trees around our house and lots of rain fall from the ceilings. When I look into the window, it was one of most horrified moments I've ever seen. It was covered by lots of rain & winds like a fog, a carabao was roaming not far from our house and some debris like metal roofs & woods are everywhere. My family were praying Hail Mary while I was holding a small statue of Blessed Virgin Mary. After the storm, I go outside and saw the town, it was most devastated & most horrified experience I've ever seen. Roofs were blown, trees fallen on the roads, electric posts were scampered & I saw the church was already destroyed when the walls both inside & outside was collapsed like an earthquake. Do you know what am I doing after the storm? I was mopping all the waters around the house, collecting some wet shoes & other stuff that was affected by storm and helping other people. 8 years later, we're still living our home and the town, already rebuilt including the church which was return back to its original form & fixed due of our tenacity & helping hands both from the our government and international aid. I will never forget that terrifying experience but I thank to our Father, His Son Jesus Christ and His Mother, Mary for giving a second chance of life that we're still alive today. As for those people who had died & still missing during the storm, may the souls rest in Peace. ♥️🙏 From a certain Filipino man in the Philippines 🇵🇭.
I was really shocked about the Tohoku Earthquake & Tsunami. To those who died in Japan, may they rest in peace...
COVID-19, though its recent, its bad, it deserves its own video....
Ah yes, the Tohoku Earthquake and Tsunami and Typhoon Haiyan 2 of the *MOST DEVASTATING NATURAL DISASTERS I'VE EVER SEEN*
05:35 - I still remember that terrific day when the earthquake struck. Though epicentre was in Nepal, we felt the tremors in Kolkata, India, which is not too far from Nepal. Everyone in my building came out running and we didn't go back to our house for about 2 hrs, in fear of aftershocks.
Do you mean Terrifying?
@@HatTrick. yes😅
Y’all could’ve put the entire 2011 tornado season in there.
Joplin tornado especially. Alongside Moore tornado in 2013.
Yeah that was bad. Where I live in southern Pennsylvania we had twenty warnings and watches within a ridiculously short time during the very worst of the outbreak. That said, no tornado ever touched down here. If only that were true for everywhere else. The following week our school was inundated with donated relief supplies. We'd been told to tell our families, any supplies you don't need, bring them here they'll be sent to the most affected areas, namely Joplin.
I remember the Haiti earthquake & i was in high school. May those who.lost their life rest in peace 💔🙏
Love your picks watchmojo keep up the amazing job 👏❤️
Most of my family is still living in Puerto Rico 🇵🇷 After the hurricane, I wasn’t able to contact my mom or family till a week or 2 later and it was only for a minute. The signal kept breaking up. She had to walk to a hill nearby which was the only spot some people got a little signal where they tried to contact family outside the island. My sister was in Ohio giving birth early in the morning when the hurricane got to PR and the signal went out, so my mom and family didn’t find out if my nephew’s birth went alright or not until I was able to talk to my mom for that bit those 1 or 2 weeks after the hurricane.
We were living in Canada at the time of the Tohoku earthquake but my wife was in Tokyo on a business trip. She was in a business meeting when it struck and she didn't know if the building was going to collapse on top of her. She was supposed to fly back to Canada the next day, but no one knew when the airport would open up again. Rather than stay in Tokyo with the developing problem at the nuclear reactor, she made her way to Osaka and took a flight from there back to Canada. We eventually moved back to Tokyo in 2013 and now live in viewing distance of Mt Fuji, which is overdue for an eruption. We are prepared, however, be it volcano, earthquake, or typhoon. And at least we are too far inland for a tsunami.
I was stationed in Japan in the 1990s and Fuji eruption was eminent if that eases your fears any😄
@@dellaboca9737 Yep. I came to Japan in 1989, and ever since, the government keeps talking about the Fuji eruption and the next Tokyo earthquake. Meanwhile, the Kobe and Tohoku earthquakes take them completely by surprise.
I was shocked about the 2019 wildfire in Australia.
I wasn't. I lived in it. My friends near Kurrajong were evacuated (their house was undamaged), and we were about 15 km down the road. I had ash and smouldering sticks, leaves, and bits of tree bark landing in my yard for months. Had all the windows and doors shut with the air-con running 24/7, not for cooling, just to filter the air. Any way the wind blew, we got smoke. It was horrid. It was one of the longest "fire seasons" we've ever had. And made even worse because it wasn't just one area, there were fires all over the country. At one point, literally half the country was either on fire or burned.
I lived through the horrific air but I live in the city. But my parents and my in-laws were evacuated we were just lucky they still had homes afterwards. Many in their little towns were not than lucky.
I Live In Australia. While We Had The Fire's. My Wife Kept On Messaging Me To See How I'm Going & Am I All Right 😃
I'll never forget Hurricane Sandy or the 2011 Earthquake and Tsunami. Another infamous memory for me is also from 2011, with the 2011 Tornado Outbreak.
I remember being on a cruise ship and we were 'being chased' from Hurricane Irma. Thankfully, we made it to Florida, one day before it struck there. Prayers to all.
Fun fact: Puerto Rico still hasn’t fully recovered from Hurricane Maria and Urma. There are still buildings, tourists attractions, and stores that haven’t been repaired or restored.
Neither have the Bahamas after Hurricane Dorian in 2019 literally wiped the country out
@@starryagent9936 also true
Hurricane sandy was crazy in nyc I went 4 months with no power or gas, but that’s something they won’t talk about.
Right?!! I’m surprised it didn’t make the List since it destroyed NJ and flooded a lot of the Northeast
My guess is because 285 people died in Sandy vs the 500 in the first story with Australia..most of these places still haven’t recovered...I hope some normalcy and peace have found you in your life
You can make a top 10 with 2020's worst disasters even tho we haven't completed the years yet
That already have Top 10 reasons why 2020 was the worst
@@ultimatum6786 I'll give you one alone: COVID
@@marinadeburgos8666 Yep that’ll be number one when watchmojo will make the video of the 2020s worst natural disasters
That Australian fire 2019 was so crazy I bought a shirt
Not even Smokey bear could stop that fire outbreak in Australia
1 of the 2010s disasters I know is the 2011 Joplin Missouri tornado disaster.
I'm sorry but it is not considered for the list for a reason, human lives, it was a disaster, yes, but practically it was only material damage, ok, that a natural phenomenon takes a life is already tragic but nothing to compare with those on the list and less if an earthquake was not in it that claimed the lives of almost 3,000 people
The disasters that stood out to me in this video, are : The earthquake and tsunami in Japan , the earthquake in Haiti also Hurricane Maria in Caribbean (my part of the world ) that was pretty bad rest in peace to all who perish in these disasters.
One minute of silence for every person who died in these disasters.
Going by the death toll of Hurricane Maria alone, that would be 25 feature length movies.
I live in Northern Calif., where our seasons are defined by earthquakes, floods, mudslides and fires, but have been so lucky to not have been directly hit by the above...I cannot fathom how anyone can survive and recover from one disaster, much less the back to back events. I am in Puerto Rico right now, following earthquakes not so long ago, and seeing what my family here survived, that this little island is pushing through....amazing.
Thank you for the update, WatchMojo..!! I hope such disasters don't occur in the current timeline. :(
The Tsunami and Fukushima Incident. That is something almost unbeatable considering the explosive potential and irradiated areas for years.
I'm just glad Steve Irwin didn't have to see that.
His family did thou and they were on the frontlines
2:06-I was shocked about this disaster in my county,The Philippines.
These were tough and worst Natural Disasters that can't be ignored and many lives were lost and everything was destroyed.
At #1, "The Haiti Earthquake from 2010", we heard about it before and it was all over the news
Yeah they should have put that in I'm not to happy about it
This made me even more grateful for life may god bless all of them
It really gives you perspective in life.
This is so cool and awesome
Wow. The 2010s sucked. Thank God we are now moving into a new decade of hope, health and prosperity.
2021 deep and I'm pretty sure we can make a top10 for 20's
2010: People wearing masks. 2020 - present: hold my beer.
I know I will never forget the Japan Earthquake/Tsunami from March 11, 2011. 10 years later and the details of that entire day are still ingrained in my head. I was in Tokyo studying abroad when it happened. I remember just standing in the doorway of my dorm room trying to think what I should do waiting for the shaking to stop. Seeing the power lines though the windows waving around like kids playing with a jump rope. After that, I remember seeing the first waves hit the coastline on the news. I remember thinking that I had to call my mom to tell her I was okay because she was working the night shift in the US and would probably hear about what happened first. It was the only call I was able to make before cell service went down. I remember getting used to the ground shaking at all times and hours of the day or night. After a couple of weeks, my University brought me back home before my study abroad time was up and I went to stay with my mom I Missouri. Then, the Joplin Tornado hit in May of 2011. This was quite an interesting year of weather phenomenon for me to say the least.
you survived both the Japan earthquake and the Joplin tornado, yikes.
the 2019 Australian wildfires really got to me.. learning of how huge of a loss of wildlife there was (were?).. especially with species like the koala.. being reminded of it just makes my eyes water ;- ; You know what's crazy? A strong earthquake that hit Japan earlier was attributed to having been a result of the 2011 earthquake. #4 8:41 there's something surreal about watching those particular styled buildings crumbling.. (sounds weird I know.. thinking it's because it seems like something you'd watch in some big world ending movie or something, as opposed to real life. [I know that explanation makes even less..])
For me, I would never forget the Haiti Earthquake and the 2011 Tornado Outbreak.
I remember where I was when I heard about 2011 japan quake. I was sitting at my computer. Look over at tv and see something weird going on. Its other side room and get up look about quake. It was so shocking. Watching buildings get swept away. It was like something out of movie but this was live on news.
Chile gets an 8.8 Earthquake in 2010, the sixth most powerful earthquake recorded with modern instruments and the second most powerful of the 2010's. It causes so few problems and little amounts of victims the world classifies it as a glorified inconvenience.
The real damage of a disaster is caused by the lack of preparation from the people affected by it. If you compare a hurricane to an earthquake, the hurricane is a breeze (pun intended) but it normally causes a lot of damage because the houses affected are made with cheap materials and near to no fundation
5:27 never fails to make me laugh 😂🤣
Honestly you can make a top 10 natural disasters from the past 100 years and most of them will be from the last 10 to 20 years.
Better record’s, larger populations and more spread out. In the olden days records were not alwase recorded and sometimes those disasters just missed people completely or hit just small community’s. Nowadays it doesn’t matter where it’s hitting a city’s getting wacked by it and that brings a larger death toll
Do worst natural disasters in 90's or in asia pls i put on the notification bell
I remember hearing about the Australian wildfires and was completely shocked at all the news, and was heartbroken at the news of all those poor animals. I also remember hearing about the Nepal earthquake and the 2011 Japanese earthquake
My God...Tohoku was a truly insane moment in human history, RIP to all those lost
So there is India's heat wave in this list but not the Uttarakhand floods from 2013 which the country considers worst disaster...was it considered man-made?
And then there is 2020, which has seen more deaths than all disasters of 2010s combined😔 RIP to all those who left us...
The Australian wild fire didn’t stop till 2020. While a technicality is given to the Japanese tusanmi and nuclear fallout because it is still going on and like with Chernobyl we won’t know it’s actually death toll till years after it happened do to cancer and other life ending diseases caused by radiation. So it’s actually only 8 of the 10
Hurricane María was a nightmare for all of us in PR
Yes, yes it was. I’m still not over it.
I will never forget Typhoon Haiyan because of Mar Roxas
There's one storm that I remember is the Groundhog day Blizzard on February 18th, 2011. Where the total amount of snow is over 6 inches. Many businesses and schools are closed for three days. It even cause a major traffic mayhem with many motorist are trapped in their cars and other vehicles.
Be Joplin, MO and Moore, OK. Joplin got hit by an EF5 tornado on May 22, 2011, basically wiping out the entire town. Moore got hit by an EF5 on May 20, 2013, and they didn't get a mention.
It is simple, death toll, the tornadoes of 2011 caused deaths but it is not even close to the numbers and extent of the damage, also, although it sounds cruel, every year they have tornadoes, every year they have damage, every year there are even be it a death because of them, tell me, how many deaths from earthquakes, heat waves, hurricanes or fires did they have in that decade? and I speak of natural phenomena, not human ones.
Yeah, 2011 as a whole was catastrophic in terms of death toll from tornadoes.
So weird this was uploaded today. I literally watched the 2000s episode yesterday & the 90s the day before
I know the fatality numbers don’t touch the others on this list, but the 2011 Super Outbreak should get an honorable mention here. Largest and costliest tornado outbreak in history. 324 people dead.
To be honest, the 2011 Super Tornado Outbreak was the 1974 Super Tornado Outbreak on steroids. The worst of these respective outbreaks are Xenia, Ohio in 1974 and Tuscaloosa, Alabama in 2011.
What about Sandy? That hurricane messed up the entire Eastern Seaboard in 2012
*sighs* The Haiti Earthquake. Intense, and tragic.
I remember the tubbs fire in 2017. I woke up at 4 something in the morning to my grandma saying there was a fire. I just assumed she was talking about a house fire until she turned the TV on and it was clear that it was worse than that
2015 Gorkha earthquake was one of the most horrifying things I had ever experienced, the aftershock that followed in May, the thing I most remember is that the sound before the earthquake the wind whooshing its so different that I can't even explain it. That whole day was filled with aftershocks my great-grandma died because she had a stroke due to high bp because of the stress. I remember that all of my family were out in the front porch and I was on the 3rd floor and the room started shaking and Nepal is no stranger to small earthquakes so I was like this will pass but then it didn't it really felt like an eternity, I remember the way my parents were calling me it still gives me chills while remembering it. I think most of the people in Nepal still have PTSD over it including me, it changed everything mostly the apartment building sector, see before that living in big 20 30 floor buildings was gaining the hype in Nepal but I remember after the earthquake some people i know literally left their flats and lived in a 1-floor house and are still living there. Changed a lot.
Hurricane Matthew in North Carolina flooding in Lumberton, my Aunt and her family lost their home they had to stay in the projects in Red Springs but they are back home back in South Gates
Those poor koala bears 🐻 sniff 😢
I remember the russian wildfires. I lived in south east finland at the time about 300km from st.petersburg and could still smell the smoke. And the heat, it's the worst I can remember. It was so long. One had to wait until like 11pm then open all windows so you could get the teperature down to a bearable level. And sauna helped, sound weird to say that in a heatwave it helps to go in to a even hotter room but it's true.
The Tohoko earthquake was devastating.... I was there in Japan in Yokohama, but I still felt a VERY strong quake.
That's about 200 miles from Sendai, right?
Im a forest firefighter from ontario canada but not a initial attack firefighter though i have before and i wish i helped in Australia i do mop up work, the MNR (type 1 FF) knocks the flames down and the type 2 FF (me) puts it out by looking for hotspots left behind (mop up work)
But during that time i had to fight fires here
The Tohoku Earthquake is a prime example of the sheer violence of geological disasters. It’s the fourth largest earthquake on record (Mag. 9.0 on the Richter scale), shifted the Japanese Islands six feet to the west, and visibly altered the degree of axis of the Earth by up to a tenth of a degree
the aussie bushfires. At the time i wasnt too far away from one of the locations it was at, we got lucky. I knew alot of people who were closer but lucky, avoided them also. Then covid hit and it became more of a shitshow here.
The summer of 2019/20 was very traumatic. I had an anxiety attack on NYE and I could not get through the night due to me feeling sick from the the anxiety and stress of the fire coming towards my hometown. We evacuated and we were still surrounded and the fire chased us the entire way out of town. It was the hottest summer since 2009. Thank god my house was not hit but in a way I was affected by the Black Summer. I will never forget it. 😫😫😫😰😰😰
I'm surprised that I experienced Typhoon Bopha. That was a hectic time. My house was used as an emergency, medical, barangay office, distribution, relief center rolled into one😷🇵🇭
Wow 😳
2017 was a rough hurricane season with Maria, Irma, and Harvey
I remember the Tohoku earthquake and tsunami. My cable provider was able to air NHK for free for 3 weeks and i was able to get updates and news despite not knowing Japanese. My Japanese friend that lives in California helped with translations and we talked about all that was going on. Luckily, her family was okay and safe but she was still rattled by the events and I just did what all good friends do and just be there for her even though we lived states away.
The April 27 2011 tornado outbreak in Alabama. No power, no money, no stores open & I was 6 months pregnant with my first child, & my bday was 4-26, not a great memory!!!
The late 2010s hold some of the worst and memorable natural disasters in my lifetime. Most were tons of devastating and strong hurricanes in the Atlantic
2010 and 2011 were awful active years for earthquakes, you have the 7.0 in Haiti, the 8.8 in Chile (which surprise me that is not on the list) and the 9.1 in Japan.
this is all so horrible but the poor animals in Australia make me cry'
Poor Koala's
In 2017, the city of Houston, Texas, where I'm from, was hit by Hurricane Harvey! It was terrible!
I don’t know if that counts but Chile earthquakes?
That's insane
i will always remember the Australian wildfire
10:05 That line is common during the previous COVID-19 days from 2020
I’ll never forget
Well, I admit that after seeing the list it was not even close to being a disaster of equal proportions but in importance it was because it hit one of the most well-known and important cities in the world, the Mexico City earthquake in 2017, the same day that commemorated 32 years of the 1985 earthquake
Here’s an idea for a countdown Top 10 smartest things done by characters in the Pokémon anime.
I can't believe that hurricane Sandy wasn't on the list. That was the worst hurricane to ever hit New York in the 2010s.
i'm shocked that the 2011 Tornado season alone wasn't on here
Can't wait for the 2020s
Depending on whose perspective you’re looking at it from I feel like the Australian Bushfires would’ve ranked higher if it’s perspective was from the flora and fauna considering well over a billion species perished in those fires
Can you top 10 facts about DC's Eclipso?
If you guys didn't know, Alberta had some of the worst disasters back in the 2010's not as much has the countries on this video but I remember some of the disasters in my home province Back in 2013 do to a Tropical storm and melting snow in the Rocky Mountains, Alberta started have a Flood Disaster that was worst then the 2005 Flood disaster, it flood multiple city's and towns including my hometown Calgary, during the clean up 1 of the train bridges broke (luckily it didn't claps down in Bow River) but only went down a bit and luckily didn't spill any chemicals in the water. Sadly 6 people were killed in the Flood Disaster. During the clean up from the Flood Disaster there was Breaking News about the Wildfire Fighters in Arizona, 29 Fire Fighters were killed, it was so sad they made a movie about them, the movie is called Only The Brave. In 2016 there was a Wildfire Disaster in Fort McMurray, Alberta, Canada, the fire was human cost and it was extremally dry by the time the fire started, the fire was so back that everyone in the city had to evacuate, Fire crews decided to stay and deal with the fire, during the evacuation 1 car was found in a highway on fire, sadly 2 people were killed in the crash, some of the evacuees drove to my hometown Calgary and some were sheltered at my school Mount Royal University (MRU), they stayed until they were cleared to return to Fort McMurray. In 2011 the Alabama state had a record braking of how many Tornados they got in 1 day and in 2016 the US dealt with more then 1 Hurricanes in 1 week If you want you can watch a show about some of the disasters I have on the comment, so far they only have 4 episodes, the show is called Rouge Earth. Episode 1 is the Fort McMurray Wildfire in 2016 Episode 2 is the Tornado Recode Braking in Alabama Episode 3 is the 2013 Alberta Flood Disaster And Episode 4 would be the Hurricanes in 2016 If you guys have a storm coming to your area, please stay safe. If a storm, fire, or anything that can cost a disaster in your home area, follow the instructions that can help you save your lives. Stay Safe Everyone
Everyone knows that coronavirus is at number 1 . I mean we are still living it in
Man-made pandemic unfortunately
And it really didn't have its full effects until 2020...
@@houndddogsss we still don't know that for sure and nothing can beat this disaster
@@1216jimmyz yeah but still it started in 2019
@@ultimatum6786 there have been multiple instances of a strand of the flu that have had a higher death toll just within the last 80 years
I was typing a history paper in the 6th grade when I got an update on MSN that a tsunami slammed into Japan
2011 joplin Missouri tornado
Hurricane Sandy, didn't see that on the list
I survived Haiyan and thank you to all those who helped. May those who perished in all calamities rest in peace.
I pray peace has found you since then
The fact that the 2019 Australia fires is only #10 is a bad sign
I remember allstralia wildfires hurricane Maria typhoon Bopha and haiyan
In the 2000's, stuff like Katrina was a once in a lifetime disaster. Nowadays, they qualify as "Tuesday." Thanks Global Warming....
It wasn’t mentioned, and it doesn’t compare to these disasters at all, but the one disaster I won’t forget was the November 2018 Camp Fire that destroyed Paradise, California. I won’t forget because that was my hometown and 85-90% of the town was destroyed in less than a day and 86 people lost their lives. Thousands lost everything, myself included.
Rest In Peace for everyone who died from these disasters