Javascript must be enabled to use all features of this site and to avoid misfunctions
1991 Mount Unzen vs. 1737 Hooghly River Cyclone -...
HOME
Select category:
Disasters
Select category
NEW

Advertising

Cancel

Search in
Close

1991 Mount Unzen vs 1737 Hooghly River Cyclone

1991 Mount Unzen
1737 Hooghly River Cyclone
Change

1991 Mount Unzen

Total costsN/A
Deaths 43

Informations

Mount Unzen (雲仙岳, Unzen-dake) is an active volcanic group of several overlapping stratovolcanoes, near the city of Shimabara, Nagasaki on the island of Kyushu, Japan's southernmost main island. In 1792, the collapse of one of its several lava domes triggered a megatsunami that killed 14,524 people in Japan's worst volcanic-related disaster. The volcano was most recently active from 1990 to 1995, and a large eruption in 1991 generated a pyroclastic flow that killed 43 people, including three volcanologists. Its highest peaks are Fugen-dake (普賢岳) at 1,359 metres (4,459 ft) and Heisei-shinzan (平成新山) at 1,486 metres (4,875 ft). The latter emerged during the eruptions of the early, eponymous Heisei era (1989–2019).

Source: Wikipedia
Change

1737 Hooghly River Cyclone

Total costsN/A
Deaths 300000

Informations

The 1737 Calcutta cyclone, also known as the Hooghly River cyclone of 1737 or the Great Bengal cyclone of 1737, was the first super cyclone on record in North Indian Ocean regarded one of the worst natural disaster in India . It hit the coast near Kolkata on the morning of 11 October 1737 and presumably killed over 300,000 people inland and sea, and caused widespread catastrophic damage. The cyclone hit land over the Ganges River Delta, just southwest of Calcutta. Most deaths resulted from storm the surge and happened on the sea: many ships sank in the Bay of Bengal and an unknown number of livestock and wild animals were killed from the effects of the cyclone. The damage was described as 'extensive' but numerical statistics are unknown.

Source: Wikipedia

More intresting stuff