October 30
2022 Morbi bridge collapse
On the evening of October 30, 2022, a pedestrian suspension bridge over the Machchhu River in Morbi, Gujarat, partly failed while crowded with visitors. The sudden collapse killed at least 135 people and injured many more. Investigations later pointed to a mix of technical failures, poor repair work, missing or failing fasteners, and dangerous overcrowding after the span had been reopened only days earlier following maintenance. Read more
2020 Aegean Sea earthquake
On October 30, 2020, a shallow Mw 7.0 earthquake struck the Aegean Sea near the Greek island of Samos, producing strong shaking felt across the eastern Aegean and western Turkey, a locally significant tsunami that flooded harbors, and deadly building collapses in İzmir. The quake exposed vulnerabilities in coastal planning and building enforcement, triggered urgent rescue operations during a global pandemic, and prompted criminal inquiries and policy shifts in the months that followed. Read more
1983 Erzurum earthquake
On October 30, 1983, a shallow, mid‑6 magnitude earthquake struck eastern Turkey with an epicenter near Horasan in Erzurum Province, leveling stone houses across remote villages and small towns in Erzurum and neighboring Kars. The quake exposed the vulnerability of unreinforced masonry in mountainous rural settings, sent rescue teams down narrow mountain roads, and left hundreds to a few thousand dead and many more injured as communities rebuilt under winter's approach. Read more
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Tsar Bomba (RDS‑220)
On October 30, 1961, the Soviet Union detonated RDS‑220—commonly called Tsar Bomba—over the Sukhoy Nos test site on Severny Island, Novaya Zemlya. Engineered to be the largest thermonuclear device ever built, the bomb’s tested configuration produced about a 50‑megaton yield, creating a mushroom cloud and shock waves recorded around the world and reshaping how governments and scientists thought about atmospheric testing.
Read morePiedmont Airlines Flight 349 crash
On October 30, 1959, Piedmont Airlines Flight 349, a Douglas DC-3 on approach to Asheville–Biltmore Airport in western North Carolina, struck rising terrain in poor weather and crashed short of the runway. All 26 people on board—three crew and 23 passengers—were killed. The Civil Aeronautics Board concluded the flight crew descended below the published minimum descent altitude without the required visual reference, resulting in controlled flight into terrain.
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