By doing their best to success and survive the weather disasters ..
people look for a safe place until the disaster goes away
With their skin and probably other stuff.
Antarctica's weather is very cold and its lowest temperature ever recorded was -89.2 degrees Celsius. Antarctica is a great place for people such as meteorologists to study weather. Weather balloons are use to find weather temperatures and speeds. It is a good place for weather study because it has more different weather changes than most other parts of the world, and since it is located at the bottom of the Earth it has different view and direction to the sun. And of course its weather patterns are different, just like all parts of the world.
The 1989 Newcastle disaster That's it
No. Mining is an activity carried out by people and therefore not natural. It is not necessarily a disaster either if it is done properly.
No, 706 people survived the disaster.
since people back then had different resources than we do now, they probably used those resources they had somehow.
float on something that is light and be prepared
weather, disaster, lack of money
they are used to the hot weather
because they wanted to survive it
faith
Weather is the same for any group of people in a given area. It is not different for different people.
There have been a number of different plagues in human history, and plagues have been extremely disastrous and have killed very large numbers of people. I could argue that the disaster was not a total disaster in the sense that the human race did survive. If a plague were to kill everybody and render the human race extinct, then I would call it a total disaster, or rather, I would call it that except for being dead, and therefore unable to offer my opinion.
One may find information about disaster recovery systems from "Disaster Assistance". This is a government run website which helps inform people about different disaster recovery systems.
A seismometer measures earthquake activity, a super-computer can forecast future weather events.
Many people showed chivalry during the disaster that wouldn't be known (and not expected) today. But people are people, and the 'will to survive' has helped us flourish for hundreds of thousands of years - and numerous adult males who valued their own lives elbowed their way onto lifeboats.