210 major earthquakes have hit Turkey since 1900: AFAD
Men survey damage in Adapazaru0131 district of Sakarya province after a 7.4 magnitude earthquake struck the neighboring Izmit province on Aug. 17, 1999, in northwestern Turkey. (AA Photo)


Turkey experienced 210 earthquakes of a magnitude 6.0 or greater from 1900 to 2017, killing at least 86,802 and heavily damaging 597,865 homes, the Disaster and Emergency Management Authority (AFAD) said this week.

Turkey sits along the seismically-active Mediterranean-Alpine-Himalayan belt, experiencing one severe and deadly earthquake about every five years, according to the "Disaster Management and Natural Disaster Statistics in Turkey" report.

Turkey's biggest earthquakes since 1900

In 1903, 2,803 people died when a 7.0 magnitude earthquake struck the Malazgirt district of eastern Muş province.

In 1912, 2,836 people died when a 7.3 magnitude earthquake struck the Şarköy district of northwestern Tekirdağ province.

In 1914, a 7.0 magnitude quake struck southwestern Burdur province, killing 2,344 people.

In 1939, 32,962 people died when a 7.9 magnitude earthquake – the strongest since the 17th century – shook northeastern Erzincan province and completely left the city in ruins, with most victims dying due to subsequent blizzard.

In 1942, 3,000 people died in a 7.0 earthquake that hit the Niksar district of the central Black Sea province of Tokat.

In 1943, a 7.4 magnitude struck the Ladik district of the Black Sea province of Samsun, killing 2,824 people.

In 1944, a 7.2 magnitude earthquake struck the Gerede district of the western Black Sea province of Bolu, killing 3,959 people.

In 1966, 2,394 people died when a 7.2 magnitude earthquake struck the Varto district of eastern Muş province.

In 1970, 1,086 people died in the Gediz district of western Kütahya province when a 7.2 magnitude earthquake occurred.

In 1976, a 7.0 earthquake struck the Çaldıran district of eastern Van province, killing 3,840 people.

In 1975, 2,394 people were killed by a 6.9 magnitude earthquake that struck the Lice district of southeastern Diyarbakır province.

In 1983, a 6.9 magnitude earthquake hit the Horasan district of eastern Erzurum province, killing 1,155 people.

In 1999, 17,480 people died when a 7.4 magnitude earthquake struck the Gölcük district of Izmit province, affecting much of the Marmara region. Later in November, 7.1 magnitude earthquake hit nearby Düzce province, killing 710 people.

In 2011, a 7.0 magnitude earthquake struck eastern Van province, killing 644 people.

Landslides, floods, avalanches

The AFAD report also included statistics on landslides, floods and avalanches that occurred in Turkey from January 1950 to June 2018.

The Black Sea region experienced the highest frequency of landslides, as approximately 21% of all landslides that occurred in the country since 1950 happened in the provinces of Trabzon, Rize, Erzurum and Giresun. Trabzon came in first of all provinces with 1,517 landslides.

The Black Sea provinces of Kastamonu and Artvin were next on list followed by the eastern provinces Bingöl, Malatya, Sivas and Erzincan.

Southeastern and northwestern Turkish provinces, including Istanbul, and the central province of Kırşehir experienced the lowest frequency of landslides, with a yearly average of less than one landslide per year.

The most floods occurred in eastern Erzurum province with 425 incidents since 1950. Eastern Sivas, Van and Bitlis provinces ranked next on the list.

Half of all avalanches in Turkey since 1950 occurred in eastern Bingöl, Bitlis, Tunceli and Malatya. Bingöl ranked first with 274 catastrophic avalanches.

The AFAD report noted that, in the last 15 years, the years with the highest number of avalanches was 2007 with 159 events and 2011 with 155 incidents. Since 2012, the number of avalanches has decreased compared to previous years, the report said.