The events in Japan got me thinking.
Would you continue to live on some islands with 108 active volcanoes, regular earthquakes and tsunami?
There is no fertile land and they are all packed in coastal areas.
IMO that's a recipe for disaster.
About 73 percent of Japan is forested, mountainous, and unsuitable for agricultural, industrial, or residential use.[2][87] As a result, the habitable zones, mainly located in coastal areas, have extremely high population densities. Japan is one of the most densely populated countries in the world.[88]
The islands of Japan are located in a volcanic zone on the Pacific Ring of Fire. They are primarily the result of large oceanic movements occurring over hundreds of millions of years from the mid-Silurian to the Pleistocene as a result of the subduction of the Philippine Sea Plate beneath the continental Amurian Plate and Okinawa Plate to the south, and subduction of the Pacific Plate under the Okhotsk Plate to the north. Japan was originally attached to the eastern coast of the Eurasian continent. The subducting plates pulled Japan eastward, opening the Sea of Japan around 15 million years ago.[89]
Japan has 108 active volcanoes. During the twentieth century several new volcanoes emerged, including Shōwa-shinzan on Hokkaido and Myōjin-shō off the Bayonnaise Rocks in the Pacific. Destructive earthquakes, often resulting in tsunami, occur several times each century.[90] The 1923 Tokyo earthquake killed over 140,000 people.[91] More recent major quakes are the 1995 Great Hanshin earthquake and the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake, a 9.0-magnitude[92] quake which hit Japan on March 11, 2011, and triggered a large tsunami.[63] Due to its location in the Pacific Ring of Fire, Japan is substantially prone to earthquakes and tsunami, having the highest natural disaster risk in the developed world.[93]
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japan
So why do people choose to live in places where disaster happens regularly ?
It's home, I know, but really?
Why?
I get it when it only happens every hundred years or so, and the land is fertile, but when disaster seems to happen every year?
I like volcanoes, have been up a few, but not sure I could cope with 108 active ones in the uk, let alone the earthquakes and the tsunamis.
Is it just me?