E-Mail Post To A Friend

Email a copy of '6 Scariest Natural Disasters.' to a friend

* Required Field






Separate multiple entries with a comma. Maximum 5 entries.



Separate multiple entries with a comma. Maximum 5 entries.


E-Mail Image Verification

Loading ... Loading ...

11 comments to "6 Scariest Natural Disasters."

  • Rick
    February 13th, 2007 at 9:25 am

    I think you mean “scariest,” not “scarriest.” Unless you mean natural disasters that cause the highest number of scars.

  • Tree
    February 13th, 2007 at 9:38 am

    Maybe it’s a different kind of disaster!

  • Bryan
    February 13th, 2007 at 9:51 am

    Maybe it’s “Richard Scarry’s Big Book of Natural Disasters!”

  • nihilist
    February 13th, 2007 at 10:29 am

    damn, other people beat me to the ’scarriest’ bit. Oh well, I guess I’ll just have to be contend with pointing out another mistake…

  • Alex
    February 13th, 2007 at 11:52 am

    hahaha - it was late at night, guys - and I did think about scarriest/scariest, but after the computer was turned off, I decided to let it go and go to sleep instead. Thanks for the corrections! It’s fixed now.

  • Dave
    February 13th, 2007 at 6:14 pm

    That Yellowstone supervolcano is downright frightening. I guess everybody’s got to go sometime, but does everyone in the Midwest have to go at the same time?

    As everyone else seems to be concerned about proper use of grammar in this post, the sentence…

    But the mysterious nature of the event has lead to a whole literature of ludicrous theories,

    should use the word “led” instead of “lead”.

    Sorry. Recovering English minor.

  • Don Hersey
    February 13th, 2007 at 6:49 pm

    I’m not so sure, logical though it might seem, that the 1918 flu benefited from the horrible conditions generated by the first half of the European civil war. My doubts are based on the notion that the disease had an autoimmune component. The worst hit people, counterinutitively enough, were the young and healthy.

  • Poppe
    February 20th, 2007 at 11:51 pm

    As I have struggled and I mean struggled all of my life time with Dyslexia even to the point of once in school being beat for it, I am now 47 years of age, I up to last month could not distinguish between the meaning of there and their, but yet can fully understand the string theory, so I am going to let this man of the hook on his misspellings, because form waat I umler stim one oily nesds the fisrt and list lettles to get ons point as th braen is a very abdaptive organ. :) And for the information Dyslexia is very common and is a neurological condition, and no it is not from eating too many led :) paint chips as a child. Great site my friend that’s for the info and education. Peace. Good Karma. Poppe

  • Haydos Emery
    February 21st, 2007 at 1:25 am

    You bored me more then you scared me.

  • LOL
    March 5th, 2007 at 11:41 am

    don hersey:

    european civil war?? wtf it was world war one buddy not some barkyard bang with rednecks and capitalists.

  • chris
    May 18th, 2007 at 4:39 pm

    Antiocus III, in 121BC made the observation that, “it is not nearly so important to be right as it is to be the only one who isn’t wrong”! that’s my boy, Anti!!!


Want your own avatar? Get one for free at Gravatar!



Neatorama Comment Policy
You don't have to register or login to comment, but it's easier if you do so. We don't censor comment based on your point of view but comments that are abusive, use excessive profanity, or contain off-topic links may get edited or deleted. On some posts, it may take up several minutes for you comment to show up.