Australia has both earthquakes and floods.
Australia has relatively little earthquake activity compared to some areas such as Iraq, Japan, Philippines and the west coast of the USA.
Earthquakes in Australia are caused by the shifting of the tectonic plates beneath the earth's crust. There are no significant fault lines runing through Australia, but activity in the fault line that runs through New Zealand can cause stress on the plate beneath the Australian continent.
Regarding floods, Australia is a very flat country. Running down the eastern coast is the Great Dividing Range, so there are the usual coastal plains there. To the west of the range are vast expanses of flat country, and when there is a lot of rainfall (which happens infrequently), the rivers quickly swell and break their banks, sending massive floods across these great plains.
Australia spends many years in drought, often caused by the El Niño effect. When an El Niño occurs, changes in sea surface temperatures cause a shift in air pressure which, in turn, can result in climatic anomalies, such as severe droughts in Australia. These years are punctuated by years of normal rainfall, but occasionally, Australia gets the opposite to an El Niño, which is La Niña. This means that weather conditions, etc, are in reverse to those seen during El Niño, and Australia experiences far more rain than usual. When this happens, many parts of Australia will see gradually increasing rainfall over the period of several months. The ground becomes too saturated to hold any more water. This often occurs during the spring and summer season, which is also cyclone season. Add to the already super-saturated ground the effects of a cyclone which becomes a rain depression once it crossed the coast, and the scenario is one of excessive rainfall leading to the ground becoming waterlogged. (This was the pattern that led to both the Brisbane floods of 1974 and 2011).
tornado,earthquakes,floods
yes
no
yes
No
There have not been any eruptions though rare earthquakes have occurred before.
Weather machines.aka low radiation.usually they make storms with them or earthquakes. Floods any kind of "mother nature" outcome source
I believe Arizona is prone to occasional earthquakes, sandstorms, and flash floods (in canyons, valleys, etc.), as well as droughts.
Australia isnt on the edge of any tectonic plates
There have been no earthquakes felt in Queensland since the start of European settlement. Australia has far fewer earthquakes than most other parts of the world. Australia has about 1 earthquake every 5 five years, compared to the world average of around 140 per year.
Its not really.. floods destroy more property every year than any of the other types of natural disaters, Earthquakes, volcanoes, tornadoes, Hurricanes. Hurricanes have the bonus of having the ability to cause flooding.
Iraq experiences earthquakes but does not have any volcanoes.