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Tsunami

A tsunami (/(t)sˈnɑːmi, (t)sʊˈ-/ (t)soo-NAH-mee, (t)suu-;[1][2][3][4] from Japanese: 津波, lit.'harbour wave',[5] pronounced [tsɯnami]) is a series of waves in a water body caused by the displacement of a large volume of water, generally in an ocean or a large lake. Earthquakes, volcanic eruptions and other underwater explosions (including detonations, landslides, glacier calvings, meteorite impacts and other disturbances) above or below water all have the potential to generate a tsunami.[6] Unlike normal ocean waves, which are generated by wind, or tides, which are in turn generated by the gravitational pull of the Moon and the Sun, a tsunami is generated by the displacement of water from a large event.

3D tsunami animation

Tsunami waves do not resemble normal undersea currents or sea waves because their wavelength is far longer.[7] Rather than appearing as a breaking wave, a tsunami may instead initially resemble a rapidly rising tide.[8] For this reason, it is often referred to as a tidal wave,[9] although this usage is not favoured by the scientific community because it might give the false impression of a causal relationship between tides and tsunamis.[10] Tsunamis generally consist of a series of waves, with periods ranging from minutes to hours, arriving in a so-called "wave train".[11] Wave heights of tens of metres can be generated by large events. Although the impact of tsunamis is limited to coastal areas, their destructive power can be enormous, and they can affect entire ocean basins. The 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami was among the deadliest natural disasters in human history, with at least 230,000 people killed or missing in 14 countries bordering the Indian Ocean.

The Ancient Greek historian Thucydides suggested in his 5th century BC History of the Peloponnesian War that tsunamis were related to submarine earthquakes,[12][13] but the understanding of tsunamis remained slim until the 20th century, and much remains unknown. Major areas of current research include determining why some large earthquakes do not generate tsunamis while other smaller ones do. This ongoing research is designed to help accurately forecast the passage of tsunamis across oceans as well as how tsunami waves interact with shorelines.

Terminology

Tsunami

Tsunami
 
"Tsunami" in kanji
Japanese name
Kanji津波
Transcriptions
Romanizationtsunami

The term "tsunami" is a borrowing from the Japanese tsunami 津波, meaning "harbour wave." For the plural, one can either follow ordinary English practice and add an s, or use an invariable plural as in the Japanese.[14] Some English speakers alter the word's initial /ts/ to an /s/ by dropping the "t," since English does not natively permit /ts/ at the beginning of words, though the original Japanese pronunciation is /ts/.

Tidal wave

 
Tsunami aftermath in Aceh, Indonesia, December 2004.

Tsunamis are sometimes referred to as tidal waves.[15] This once-popular term derives from the most common appearance of a tsunami, which is that of an extraordinarily high tidal bore. Tsunamis and tides both produce waves of water that move inland, but in the case of a tsunami, the inland movement of water may be much greater, giving the impression of an incredibly high and forceful tide. In recent years, the term "tidal wave" has fallen out of favour, especially in the scientific community, because the causes of tsunamis have nothing to do with those of tides, which are produced by the gravitational pull of the moon and sun rather than the displacement of water. Although the meanings of "tidal" include "resembling"[16] or "having the form or character of"[17] tides, use of the term tidal wave is discouraged by geologists and oceanographers.

A 1969 episode of the TV crime show Hawaii Five-O entitled "Forty Feet High and It Kills!" used the terms "tsunami" and "tidal wave" interchangeably.[18]

Seismic sea wave

The term seismic sea wave is also used to refer to the phenomenon because the waves most often are generated by seismic activity such as earthquakes.[19] Prior to the rise of the use of the term tsunami in English, scientists generally encouraged the use of the term seismic sea wave rather than tidal wave. However, like tsunami, seismic sea wave is not a completely accurate term, as forces other than earthquakes—including underwater landslides, volcanic eruptions, underwater explosions, land or ice slumping into the ocean, meteorite impacts, and the weather when the atmospheric pressure changes very rapidly—can generate such waves by displacing water.[20][21]

History

 

While Japan may have the longest recorded history of tsunamis, the sheer destruction caused by the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami event mark it as the most devastating of its kind in modern times, killing around 230,000 people.[22] The Sumatran region is also accustomed to tsunamis, with earthquakes of varying magnitudes regularly occurring off the coast of the island.[23]

Tsunamis are an often underestimated hazard in the Mediterranean Sea and parts of Europe. Of historical and current (with regard to risk assumptions) importance are the 1755 Lisbon earthquake and tsunami (which was caused by the Azores–Gibraltar Transform Fault), the 1783 Calabrian earthquakes, each causing several tens of thousands of deaths and the 1908 Messina earthquake and tsunami. The tsunami claimed more than 123,000 lives in Sicily and Calabria and is among the most deadly natural disasters in modern Europe. The Storegga Slide in the Norwegian Sea and some examples of tsunamis affecting the British Isles refer to landslide and meteotsunamis predominantly and less to earthquake-induced waves.

As early as 426 BC the Greek historian Thucydides inquired in his book History of the Peloponnesian War about the causes of tsunami, and was the first to argue that ocean earthquakes must be the cause.[12][13] The oldest human record of a tsunami dates back to 479 BC, in the Greek colony of Potidaea, thought to be triggered by an earthquake. The tsunami may have saved the colony from an invasion by the Achaemenid Empire.[13]

The cause, in my opinion, of this phenomenon must be sought in the earthquake. At the point where its shock has been the most violent the sea is driven back, and suddenly recoiling with redoubled force, causes the inundation. Without an earthquake I do not see how such an accident could happen.[24]

The Roman historian Ammianus Marcellinus (Res Gestae 26.10.15–19) described the typical sequence of a tsunami, including an incipient earthquake, the sudden retreat of the sea and a following gigantic wave, after the 365 AD tsunami devastated Alexandria.[25][26]

Causes

The principal generation mechanism of a tsunami is the displacement of a substantial volume of water or perturbation of the sea.[27] This displacement of water is usually caused by earthquakes,[28][29][30] but can also be attributed to landslides, volcanic eruptions, glacier calvings or more rarely by meteorites and nuclear tests.[31][32] However, the possibility of a meteorite causing a tsunami is debated.[33]

Seismicity

Tsunamis can be generated when the sea floor abruptly deforms and vertically displaces the overlying water. Tectonic earthquakes are a particular kind of earthquake that are associated with the Earth's crustal deformation; when these earthquakes occur beneath the sea, the water above the deformed area is displaced from its equilibrium position.[34] More specifically, a tsunami can be generated when thrust faults associated with convergent or destructive plate boundaries move abruptly, resulting in water displacement, owing to the vertical component of movement involved. Movement on normal (extensional) faults can also cause displacement of the seabed, but only the largest of such events (typically related to flexure in the outer trench swell) cause enough displacement to give rise to a significant tsunami, such as the 1977 Sumba and 1933 Sanriku events.[35][36]

Tsunamis have a small wave height offshore, and a very long wavelength (often hundreds of kilometres long, whereas normal ocean waves have a wavelength of only 30 or 40 metres),[37] which is why they generally pass unnoticed at sea, forming only a slight swell usually about 300 millimetres (12 in) above the normal sea surface. They grow in height when they reach shallower water, in a wave shoaling process described below. A tsunami can occur in any tidal state and even at low tide can still inundate coastal areas.

On April 1, 1946, the 8.6 MwAleutian Islands earthquake occurred with a maximum Mercalli intensity of VI (Strong). It generated a tsunami which inundated Hilo on the island of Hawaii with a 14-metre high (46 ft) surge. Between 165 and 173 were killed. The area where the earthquake occurred is where the Pacific Ocean floor is subducting (or being pushed downwards) under Alaska.

Examples of tsunamis originating at locations away from convergent boundaries include Storegga about 8,000 years ago, Grand Banks in 1929, and Papua New Guinea in 1998 (Tappin, 2001). The Grand Banks and Papua New Guinea tsunamis came from earthquakes which destabilised sediments, causing them to flow into the ocean and generate a tsunami. They dissipated before travelling transoceanic distances.

The cause of the Storegga sediment failure is unknown. Possibilities include an overloading of the sediments, an earthquake or a release of gas hydrates (methane etc.).

The 1960 Valdivia earthquake (Mw 9.5), 1964 Alaska earthquake (Mw 9.2), 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake (Mw 9.2), and 2011 Tōhoku earthquake (Mw9.0) are recent examples of powerful megathrust earthquakes that generated tsunamis (known as teletsunamis) that can cross entire oceans. Smaller (Mw 4.2) earthquakes in Japan can trigger tsunamis (called local and regional tsunamis) that can devastate stretches of coastline, but can do so in only a few minutes at a time.

Landslides

The Tauredunum event was a large tsunami on Lake Geneva in 563 CE, caused by sedimentary deposits destabilized by a landslide.

In the 1950s, it was discovered that tsunamis larger than had previously been believed possible can be caused by giant submarine landslides. These large volumes of rapidly displaced water transfer energy at a faster rate than the water can absorb. Their existence was confirmed in 1958, when a giant landslide in Lituya Bay, Alaska, caused the highest wave ever recorded, which had a height of 524 metres (1,719 ft).[38] The wave did not travel far as it struck land almost immediately. The wave struck three boats—each with two people aboard—anchored in the bay. One boat rode out the wave, but the wave sank the other two, killing both people aboard one of them.[39][40][41]

Another landslide-tsunami event occurred in 1963 when a massive landslide from Monte Toc entered the reservoir behind the Vajont Dam in Italy. The resulting wave surged over the 262-metre (860 ft)-high dam by 250 metres (820 ft) and destroyed several towns. Around 2,000 people died.[42][43] Scientists named these waves megatsunamis.

Some geologists claim that large landslides from volcanic islands, e.g. Cumbre Vieja on La Palma (Cumbre Vieja tsunami hazard) in the Canary Islands, may be able to generate megatsunamis that can cross oceans, but this is disputed by many others.

In general, landslides generate displacements mainly in the shallower parts of the coastline, and there is conjecture about the nature of large landslides that enter the water. This has been shown to subsequently affect water in enclosed bays and lakes, but a landslide large enough to cause a transoceanic tsunami has not occurred within recorded history. Susceptible locations are believed to be the Big Island of Hawaii, Fogo in the Cape Verde Islands, La Reunion in the Indian Ocean, and Cumbre Vieja on the island of La Palma in the Canary Islands; along with other volcanic ocean islands. This is because large masses of relatively unconsolidated volcanic material occurs on the flanks and in some cases detachment planes are believed to be developing. However, there is growing controversy about how dangerous these slopes actually are.[44]

Volcanic eruptions

Other than by landslides or sector collapse, volcanoes may be able to generate waves by pyroclastic flow submergence, caldera collapse, or underwater explosions.[45] Tsunamis have been triggered by a number of volcanic eruptions, including the 1883 eruption of Krakatoa, and the 2022 Hunga Tonga–Hunga Ha'apai eruption. Over 20% of all fatalities caused by volcanism during the past 250 years are estimated to have been caused by volcanogenic tsunamis.[46]

Debate has persisted over the origins and source mechanisms of these types of tsunamis, such as those generated by Krakatoa in 1883,[46] and they remain lesser understood than their seismic relatives. This poses a large problem of awareness and preparedness, as exemplified by the eruption and collapse of Anak Krakatoa in 2018, which killed 426 and injured thousands when no warning was available.

It is still regarded that lateral landslides and ocean-entering pyroclastic currents are most likely to generate the largest and most hazardous waves from volcanism;[47] however, field investigation of the Tongan event, as well as developments in numerical modelling methods, currently aim to expand the understanding of the other source mechanisms.[48][49]

Meteorological

Some meteorological conditions, especially rapid changes in barometric pressure, as seen with the passing of a front, can displace bodies of water enough to cause trains of waves with wavelengths. These are comparable to seismic tsunamis, but usually with lower energies. Essentially, they are dynamically equivalent to seismic tsunamis, the only differences being 1) that meteotsunamis lack the transoceanic reach of significant seismic tsunamis, and 2) that the force that displaces the water is sustained over some length of time such that meteotsunamis cannot be modelled as having been caused instantaneously. In spite of their lower energies, on shorelines where they can be amplified by resonance, they are sometimes powerful enough to cause localised damage and potential for loss of life. They have been documented in many places, including the Great Lakes, the Aegean Sea, the English Channel, and the Balearic Islands, where they are common enough to have a local name, rissaga. In Sicily they are called marubbio and in Nagasaki Bay, they are called abiki. Some examples of destructive meteotsunamis include 31 March 1979 at Nagasaki and 15 June 2006 at Menorca, the latter causing damage in the tens of millions of euros.[50]

Meteotsunamis should not be confused with storm surges, which are local increases in sea level associated with the low barometric pressure of passing tropical cyclones, nor should they be confused with setup, the temporary local raising of sea level caused by strong on-shore winds. Storm surges and setup are also dangerous causes of coastal flooding in severe weather but their dynamics are completely unrelated to tsunami waves.[50] They are unable to propagate beyond their sources, as waves do.

Man-made or triggered tsunamis

There have been studies of the potential of the induction of and at least one actual attempt to create tsunami waves as a tectonic weapon.

In World War II, the New Zealand Military Forces initiated Project Seal, which attempted to create small tsunamis with explosives in the area of today's Shakespear Regional Park; the attempt failed.[51]

There has been considerable speculation on the possibility of using nuclear weapons to cause tsunamis near an enemy coastline. Even during World War II consideration of the idea using conventional explosives was explored. Nuclear testing in the Pacific Proving Ground by the United States seemed to generate poor results. Operation Crossroads fired two 20 kilotonnes of TNT (84 TJ) bombs, one in the air and one underwater, above and below the shallow (50 m (160 ft)) waters of the Bikini Atoll lagoon. Fired about 6 km (3.7 mi) from the nearest island, the waves there were no higher than 3–4 m (9.8–13.1 ft) upon reaching the shoreline. Other underwater tests, mainly Hardtack I/Wahoo (deep water) and Hardtack I/Umbrella (shallow water) confirmed the results. Analysis of the effects of shallow and deep underwater explosions indicate that the energy of the explosions does not easily generate the kind of deep, all-ocean waveforms which are tsunamis; most of the energy creates steam, causes vertical fountains above the water, and creates compressional waveforms.[52] Tsunamis are hallmarked by permanent large vertical displacements of very large volumes of water which do not occur in explosions.

Characteristics

 
When the wave enters shallow water, it slows down and its amplitude (height) increases.
 
The wave further slows and amplifies as it hits land. Only the largest waves crest.

Tsunamis are caused by earthquakes, landslides, volcanic explosions, glacier calvings, and bolides. They cause damage by two mechanisms: the smashing force of a wall of water travelling at high speed, and the destructive power of a large volume of water draining off the land and carrying a large amount of debris with it, even with waves that do not appear to be large.

While everyday wind waves have a wavelength (from crest to crest) of about 100 metres (330 ft) and a height of roughly 2 metres (6.6 ft), a tsunami in the deep ocean has a much larger wavelength of up to 200 kilometres (120 mi). Such a wave travels at well over 800 kilometres per hour (500 mph), but owing to the enormous wavelength the wave oscillation at any given point takes 20 or 30 minutes to complete a cycle and has an amplitude of only about 1 metre (3.3 ft).[53] This makes tsunamis difficult to detect over deep water, where ships are unable to feel their passage.

The velocity of a tsunami can be calculated by obtaining the square root of the depth of the water in metres multiplied by the acceleration due to gravity (approximated to 10 m/s2). For example, if the Pacific Ocean is considered to have a depth of 5000 metres, the velocity of a tsunami would be 5000 × 10 = 50000 ≈ 224 metres per second (730 ft/s), which equates to a speed of about 806 kilometres per hour (501 mph). This is the formula used for calculating the velocity of shallow-water waves. Even the deep ocean is shallow in this sense because a tsunami wave is so long (horizontally from crest to crest) by comparison.

The reason for the Japanese name "harbour wave" is that sometimes a village's fishermen would sail out, and encounter no unusual waves while out at sea fishing, and come back to land to find their village devastated by a huge wave.

As the tsunami approaches the coast and the waters become shallow, wave shoaling compresses the wave and its speed decreases below 80 kilometres per hour (50 mph). Its wavelength diminishes to less than 20 kilometres (12 mi) and its amplitude grows enormously—in accord with Green's law. Since the wave still has the same very long period, the tsunami may take minutes to reach full height. Except for the very largest tsunamis, the approaching wave does not break, but rather appears like a fast-moving tidal bore.[54] Open bays and coastlines adjacent to very deep water may shape the tsunami further into a step-like wave with a steep-breaking front.

When the tsunami's wave peak reaches the shore, the resulting temporary rise in sea level is termed run up. Run up is measured in metres above a reference sea level.[54] A large tsunami may feature multiple waves arriving over a period of hours, with significant time between the wave crests. The first wave to reach the shore may not have the highest run-up.[55]

About 80% of tsunamis occur in the Pacific Ocean, but they are possible wherever there are large bodies of water, including lakes. However, tsunami interactions with shorelines and the seafloor topography are extremely complex, which leaves some countries more vulnerable than others. For example, the Pacific coasts of the United States and Mexico lie adjacent to each other, but the United States has recorded ten tsunamis in the region since 1788, while Mexico has recorded twenty-five since 1732.[56][57] Similarly, Japan has had more than a hundred tsunamis in recorded history, while the neighboring island of Taiwan has registered only two, in 1781 and 1867.[58][59]

Drawback

 
An illustration of the rhythmic "drawback" of surface water associated with a wave. It follows that a very large drawback may herald the arrival of a very large wave.

All waves have a positive and negative peak; that is, a ridge and a trough. In the case of a propagating wave like a tsunami, either may be the first to arrive. If the first part to arrive at the shore is the ridge, a massive breaking wave or sudden flooding will be the first effect noticed on land. However, if the first part to arrive is a trough, a drawback will occur as the shoreline recedes dramatically, exposing normally submerged areas. The drawback can exceed hundreds of metres, and people unaware of the danger sometimes remain near the shore to satisfy their curiosity or to collect fish from the exposed seabed.

A typical wave period for a damaging tsunami is about twelve minutes. Thus, the sea recedes in the drawback phase, with areas well below sea level exposed after three minutes. For the next six minutes, the wave trough builds into a ridge which may flood the coast, and destruction ensues. During the next six minutes, the wave changes from a ridge to a trough, and the flood waters recede in a second drawback. Victims and debris may be swept into the ocean. The process repeats with succeeding waves.

Scales of intensity and magnitude

As with earthquakes, several attempts have been made to set up scales of tsunami intensity or magnitude to allow comparison between different events.[60]

Intensity scales

The first scales used routinely to measure the intensity of tsunamis were the Sieberg-Ambraseys scale (1962), used in the Mediterranean Sea and the Imamura-Iida intensity scale (1963), used in the Pacific Ocean. The latter scale was modified by Soloviev (1972), who calculated the tsunami intensity "I" according to the formula:

 

where   is the "tsunami height" in meters, averaged along the nearest coastline, with the tsunami height defined as the rise of the water level above the normal tidal level at the time of occurrence of the tsunami.[61] This scale, known as the Soloviev-Imamura tsunami intensity scale, is used in the global tsunami catalogues compiled by the NGDC/NOAA[62] and the Novosibirsk Tsunami Laboratory as the main parameter for the size of the tsunami.

This formula yields:

  • I = 2 for   = 2.8 metres
  • I = 3 for   = 5.5 metres
  • I = 4 for   = 11 metres
  • I = 5 for   = 22.5 metres
  • etc.

In 2013, following the intensively studied tsunamis in 2004 and 2011, a new 12-point scale was proposed, the Integrated Tsunami Intensity Scale (ITIS-2012), intended to match as closely as possible to the modified ESI2007 and EMS earthquake intensity scales.[63][64]

Magnitude scales

The first scale that genuinely calculated a magnitude for a tsunami, rather than an intensity at a particular location was the ML scale proposed by Murty & Loomis based on the potential energy.[60] Difficulties in calculating the potential energy of the tsunami mean that this scale is rarely used. Abe introduced the tsunami magnitude scale  , calculated from,

 

where h is the maximum tsunami-wave amplitude (in m) measured by a tide gauge at a distance R from the epicentre, a, b and D are constants used to make the Mt scale match as closely as possible with the moment magnitude scale.[65]

Tsunami heights

 
Diagram showing several measures to describe a tsunami size, including height, inundation and run-up.

Several terms are used to describe the different characteristics of tsunami in terms of their height:[66][67][68][69]

  • Amplitude, Wave Height, or Tsunami Height: Refers to the height of a tsunami relative to the normal sea level at the time of the tsunami, which may be tidal High Water, or Low Water. It is different from the crest-to-trough height which is commonly used to measure other type of wave height.[70]
  • Run-up Height, or Inundation Height: The height reached by a tsunami on the ground above sea level, Maximum run-up height refers to the maximum height reached by water above sea level, which is sometimes reported as the maximum height reached by a tsunami.
  • Flow Depth: Refers to the height of tsunami above ground, regardless of the height of the location or sea level.
  • (Maximum) Water Level: Maximum height above sea level as seen from trace or water mark. Different from maximum run-up height in the sense that they are not necessarily water marks at inundation line/limit.

Warnings and predictions

 
Calculated travel time map for the 1964 Alaska tsunami (in hours)

Drawbacks can serve as a brief warning. People who observe drawback (many survivors report an accompanying sucking sound), can survive only if they immediately run for high ground or seek the upper floors of nearby buildings.

In 2004, ten-year-old Tilly Smith of Surrey, England, was on Maikhao beach in Phuket, Thailand with her parents and sister, and having learned about tsunamis recently in school, told her family that a tsunami might be imminent. Her parents warned others minutes before the wave arrived, saving dozens of lives. She credited her geography teacher, Andrew Kearney.

In the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami drawback was not reported on the African coast or any other east-facing coasts that it reached. This was because the initial wave moved downwards on the eastern side of the megathrust and upwards on the western side. The western pulse hit coastal Africa and other western areas.

A tsunami cannot be precisely predicted, even if the magnitude and location of an earthquake is known. Geologists, oceanographers, and seismologists analyse each earthquake and based on many factors may or may not issue a tsunami warning. However, there are some warning signs of an impending tsunami, and automated systems can provide warnings immediately after an earthquake in time to save lives. One of the most successful systems uses bottom pressure sensors, attached to buoys, which constantly monitor the pressure of the overlying water column.

Regions with a high tsunami risk typically use tsunami warning systems to warn the population before the wave reaches land. On the west coast of the United States, which is prone to tsunamis from the Pacific Ocean, warning signs indicate evacuation routes. In Japan, the populace is well-educated about earthquakes and tsunamis, and along Japanese shorelines, tsunami warning signs remind people of the natural hazards along with a network of warning sirens, typically at the top of the cliffs of surrounding hills.[71]

The Pacific Tsunami Warning System is based in Honolulu, Hawaiʻi. It monitors Pacific Ocean seismic activity. A sufficiently large earthquake magnitude and other information triggers a tsunami warning. While the subduction zones around the Pacific are seismically active, not all earthquakes generate a tsunami. Computers assist in analysing the tsunami risk of every earthquake that occurs in the Pacific Ocean and the adjoining land masses.

As a direct result of the Indian Ocean tsunami, a re-appraisal of the tsunami threat for all coastal areas is being undertaken by national governments and the United Nations Disaster Mitigation Committee. A tsunami warning system is being installed in the Indian Ocean.

 
One of the deep water buoys used in the DART tsunami warning system

Computer models can predict tsunami arrival, usually within minutes of the arrival time. Bottom pressure sensors can relay information in real time. Based on these pressure readings and other seismic information and the seafloor's shape (bathymetry) and coastal topography, the models estimate the amplitude and surge height of the approaching tsunami. All Pacific Rim countries collaborate in the Tsunami Warning System and most regularly practise evacuation and other procedures. In Japan, such preparation is mandatory for government, local authorities, emergency services and the population.

Along the United States west coast, in addition to sirens, warnings are sent on television and radio via the National Weather Service, using the Emergency Alert System.

Possible animal reaction

Some zoologists hypothesise that some animal species have an ability to sense subsonic Rayleigh waves from an earthquake or a tsunami. If correct, monitoring their behaviour could provide advance warning of earthquakes and tsunamis. However, the evidence is controversial and is not widely accepted. There are unsubstantiated claims about the Lisbon quake that some animals escaped to higher ground, while many other animals in the same areas drowned. The phenomenon was also noted by media sources in Sri Lanka in the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake.[72][73] It is possible that certain animals (e.g., elephants) may have heard the sounds of the tsunami as it approached the coast. The elephants' reaction was to move away from the approaching noise. By contrast, some humans went to the shore to investigate and many drowned as a result.

Mitigation

 
A seawall at Tsu, Mie Prefecture in Japan

In some tsunami-prone countries, earthquake engineering measures have been taken to reduce the damage caused onshore.

Japan, where tsunami science and response measures first began following a disaster in 1896, has produced ever-more elaborate countermeasures and response plans.[74] The country has built many tsunami walls of up to 12 metres (39 ft) high to protect populated coastal areas. Other localities have built floodgates of up to 15.5 metres (51 ft) high and channels to redirect the water from an incoming tsunami. However, their effectiveness has been questioned, as tsunamis often overtop the barriers.

The Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster was directly triggered by the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami, when waves exceeded the height of the plant's sea wall.[75] Iwate Prefecture, which is an area at high risk from tsunami, had tsunami barriers walls (Taro sea wall) totalling 25 kilometres (16 mi) long at coastal towns. The 2011 tsunami toppled more than 50% of the walls and caused catastrophic damage.[76]

The Okushiri, Hokkaidō tsunami which struck Okushiri Island of Hokkaidō within two to five minutes of the earthquake on July 12, 1993, created waves as much as 30 metres (100 ft) tall—as high as a 10-storey building. The port town of Aonae was completely surrounded by a tsunami wall, but the waves washed right over the wall and destroyed all the wood-framed structures in the area. The wall may have succeeded in slowing down and moderating the height of the tsunami, but it did not prevent major destruction and loss of life.[77]

See also

Footnotes

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  12. ^ a b Thucydides: “A History of the Peloponnesian War”, 3.89.1–4
  13. ^ a b c Smid, T. C. (April 1970). 'Tsunamis' in Greek Literature. Greece & Rome. Vol. 17 (2nd ed.). pp. 100–104.
  14. ^ [a. Jap. tsunami, tunami, f. tsu harbour + nami waves.—Oxford English Dictionary]
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  17. ^ -al. (n.d.). Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1). Retrieved November 11, 2008, Dictionary.reference.com
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  24. ^ Thucydides: “A History of the Peloponnesian War”, 3.89.5
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References

  • IOC Tsunami Glossary by the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission (IOC) at the International Tsunami Information Centre (ITIC) of UNESCO
  • at NOAA
  • In June 2011, the VOA Special English service of the Voice of America broadcast a 15-minute program on tsunamis as part of its weekly Science in the News series. The program included an interview with an NOAA official who oversees the agency's tsunami warning system. A transcript and MP3 of the program, intended for English learners, can be found at The Ever-Present Threat of Tsunamis.
  • abelard.org. tsunamis: tsunamis travel fast but not at infinite speed. retrieved March 29, 2005.
  • Dudley, Walter C. & Lee, Min (1988: 1st edition) Tsunami! ISBN 0-8248-1125-9
  • Iwan, W.D., editor, 2006, Summary report of the Great Sumatra Earthquakes and Indian Ocean tsunamis of December 26, 2004 and March 28, 2005: Earthquake Engineering Research Institute, EERI Publication #2006-06, 11 chapters, 100-page summary, plus CD-ROM with complete text and supplementary photographs, EERI Report 2006–06. ISBN 1-932884-19-X website
  • Kenneally, Christine (December 30, 2004). "Surviving the Tsunami." Slate. website
  • Lambourne, Helen (March 27, 2005). "Tsunami: Anatomy of a disaster." BBC News. website
  • Macey, Richard (January 1, 2005). "The Big Bang that Triggered A Tragedy," The Sydney Morning Herald, p 11—quoting Dr Mark Leonard, seismologist at Geoscience Australia.
  • Interactive Map of Historical Tsunamis from NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information
  • Tappin, D; 2001. Local tsunamis. Geoscientist. 11–8, 4–7.
  • Girl, 10, used geography lesson to save lives, Telegraph.co.uk
  • Philippines warned to prepare for Japan's tsunami, Noypi.ph

Further reading

External links

tsunami, other, uses, disambiguation, tidal, wave, tsunami, ɑː, from, japanese, 津波, harbour, wave, pronounced, tsɯnami, series, waves, water, body, caused, displacement, large, volume, water, generally, ocean, large, lake, earthquakes, volcanic, eruptions, oth. For other uses see Tsunami disambiguation and Tidal wave A tsunami t s uː ˈ n ɑː m i t s ʊ ˈ t soo NAH mee t suu 1 2 3 4 from Japanese 津波 lit harbour wave 5 pronounced tsɯnami is a series of waves in a water body caused by the displacement of a large volume of water generally in an ocean or a large lake Earthquakes volcanic eruptions and other underwater explosions including detonations landslides glacier calvings meteorite impacts and other disturbances above or below water all have the potential to generate a tsunami 6 Unlike normal ocean waves which are generated by wind or tides which are in turn generated by the gravitational pull of the Moon and the Sun a tsunami is generated by the displacement of water from a large event The 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami at Ao Nang Krabi Province Thailand source source source source source source source source source source source source 3D tsunami animation Tsunami waves do not resemble normal undersea currents or sea waves because their wavelength is far longer 7 Rather than appearing as a breaking wave a tsunami may instead initially resemble a rapidly rising tide 8 For this reason it is often referred to as a tidal wave 9 although this usage is not favoured by the scientific community because it might give the false impression of a causal relationship between tides and tsunamis 10 Tsunamis generally consist of a series of waves with periods ranging from minutes to hours arriving in a so called wave train 11 Wave heights of tens of metres can be generated by large events Although the impact of tsunamis is limited to coastal areas their destructive power can be enormous and they can affect entire ocean basins The 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami was among the deadliest natural disasters in human history with at least 230 000 people killed or missing in 14 countries bordering the Indian Ocean The Ancient Greek historian Thucydides suggested in his 5th century BC History of the Peloponnesian War that tsunamis were related to submarine earthquakes 12 13 but the understanding of tsunamis remained slim until the 20th century and much remains unknown Major areas of current research include determining why some large earthquakes do not generate tsunamis while other smaller ones do This ongoing research is designed to help accurately forecast the passage of tsunamis across oceans as well as how tsunami waves interact with shorelines Contents 1 Terminology 1 1 Tsunami 1 2 Tidal wave 1 3 Seismic sea wave 2 History 3 Causes 3 1 Seismicity 3 2 Landslides 3 3 Volcanic eruptions 3 4 Meteorological 3 5 Man made or triggered tsunamis 4 Characteristics 5 Drawback 6 Scales of intensity and magnitude 6 1 Intensity scales 6 2 Magnitude scales 7 Tsunami heights 8 Warnings and predictions 8 1 Possible animal reaction 9 Mitigation 10 See also 11 Footnotes 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksTerminologyTsunami Tsunami Tsunami in kanjiJapanese nameKanji津波TranscriptionsRomanizationtsunamiThe term tsunami is a borrowing from the Japanese tsunami 津波 meaning harbour wave For the plural one can either follow ordinary English practice and add an s or use an invariable plural as in the Japanese 14 Some English speakers alter the word s initial ts to an s by dropping the t since English does not natively permit ts at the beginning of words though the original Japanese pronunciation is ts Tidal wave Tsunami aftermath in Aceh Indonesia December 2004 Tsunamis are sometimes referred to as tidal waves 15 This once popular term derives from the most common appearance of a tsunami which is that of an extraordinarily high tidal bore Tsunamis and tides both produce waves of water that move inland but in the case of a tsunami the inland movement of water may be much greater giving the impression of an incredibly high and forceful tide In recent years the term tidal wave has fallen out of favour especially in the scientific community because the causes of tsunamis have nothing to do with those of tides which are produced by the gravitational pull of the moon and sun rather than the displacement of water Although the meanings of tidal include resembling 16 or having the form or character of 17 tides use of the term tidal wave is discouraged by geologists and oceanographers A 1969 episode of the TV crime show Hawaii Five O entitled Forty Feet High and It Kills used the terms tsunami and tidal wave interchangeably 18 Seismic sea wave The term seismic sea wave is also used to refer to the phenomenon because the waves most often are generated by seismic activity such as earthquakes 19 Prior to the rise of the use of the term tsunami in English scientists generally encouraged the use of the term seismic sea wave rather than tidal wave However like tsunami seismic sea wave is not a completely accurate term as forces other than earthquakes including underwater landslides volcanic eruptions underwater explosions land or ice slumping into the ocean meteorite impacts and the weather when the atmospheric pressure changes very rapidly can generate such waves by displacing water 20 21 HistorySee also List of tsunamis Lisbon earthquake and tsunami in November 1755 While Japan may have the longest recorded history of tsunamis the sheer destruction caused by the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami event mark it as the most devastating of its kind in modern times killing around 230 000 people 22 The Sumatran region is also accustomed to tsunamis with earthquakes of varying magnitudes regularly occurring off the coast of the island 23 Tsunamis are an often underestimated hazard in the Mediterranean Sea and parts of Europe Of historical and current with regard to risk assumptions importance are the 1755 Lisbon earthquake and tsunami which was caused by the Azores Gibraltar Transform Fault the 1783 Calabrian earthquakes each causing several tens of thousands of deaths and the 1908 Messina earthquake and tsunami The tsunami claimed more than 123 000 lives in Sicily and Calabria and is among the most deadly natural disasters in modern Europe The Storegga Slide in the Norwegian Sea and some examples of tsunamis affecting the British Isles refer to landslide and meteotsunamis predominantly and less to earthquake induced waves As early as 426 BC the Greek historian Thucydides inquired in his book History of the Peloponnesian War about the causes of tsunami and was the first to argue that ocean earthquakes must be the cause 12 13 The oldest human record of a tsunami dates back to 479 BC in the Greek colony of Potidaea thought to be triggered by an earthquake The tsunami may have saved the colony from an invasion by the Achaemenid Empire 13 The cause in my opinion of this phenomenon must be sought in the earthquake At the point where its shock has been the most violent the sea is driven back and suddenly recoiling with redoubled force causes the inundation Without an earthquake I do not see how such an accident could happen 24 The Roman historian Ammianus Marcellinus Res Gestae 26 10 15 19 described the typical sequence of a tsunami including an incipient earthquake the sudden retreat of the sea and a following gigantic wave after the 365 AD tsunami devastated Alexandria 25 26 CausesThe principal generation mechanism of a tsunami is the displacement of a substantial volume of water or perturbation of the sea 27 This displacement of water is usually caused by earthquakes 28 29 30 but can also be attributed to landslides volcanic eruptions glacier calvings or more rarely by meteorites and nuclear tests 31 32 However the possibility of a meteorite causing a tsunami is debated 33 Seismicity Tsunamis can be generated when the sea floor abruptly deforms and vertically displaces the overlying water Tectonic earthquakes are a particular kind of earthquake that are associated with the Earth s crustal deformation when these earthquakes occur beneath the sea the water above the deformed area is displaced from its equilibrium position 34 More specifically a tsunami can be generated when thrust faults associated with convergent or destructive plate boundaries move abruptly resulting in water displacement owing to the vertical component of movement involved Movement on normal extensional faults can also cause displacement of the seabed but only the largest of such events typically related to flexure in the outer trench swell cause enough displacement to give rise to a significant tsunami such as the 1977 Sumba and 1933 Sanriku events 35 36 Drawing of tectonic plate boundary before earthquake Over riding plate bulges under strain causing tectonic uplift Plate slips causing subsidence and releasing energy into water The energy released produces tsunami waves Tsunamis have a small wave height offshore and a very long wavelength often hundreds of kilometres long whereas normal ocean waves have a wavelength of only 30 or 40 metres 37 which is why they generally pass unnoticed at sea forming only a slight swell usually about 300 millimetres 12 in above the normal sea surface They grow in height when they reach shallower water in a wave shoaling process described below A tsunami can occur in any tidal state and even at low tide can still inundate coastal areas On April 1 1946 the 8 6 Mw Aleutian Islands earthquake occurred with a maximum Mercalli intensity of VI Strong It generated a tsunami which inundated Hilo on the island of Hawaii with a 14 metre high 46 ft surge Between 165 and 173 were killed The area where the earthquake occurred is where the Pacific Ocean floor is subducting or being pushed downwards under Alaska Examples of tsunamis originating at locations away from convergent boundaries include Storegga about 8 000 years ago Grand Banks in 1929 and Papua New Guinea in 1998 Tappin 2001 The Grand Banks and Papua New Guinea tsunamis came from earthquakes which destabilised sediments causing them to flow into the ocean and generate a tsunami They dissipated before travelling transoceanic distances The cause of the Storegga sediment failure is unknown Possibilities include an overloading of the sediments an earthquake or a release of gas hydrates methane etc The 1960 Valdivia earthquake Mw 9 5 1964 Alaska earthquake Mw 9 2 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake Mw 9 2 and 2011 Tōhoku earthquake Mw9 0 are recent examples of powerful megathrust earthquakes that generated tsunamis known as teletsunamis that can cross entire oceans Smaller Mw 4 2 earthquakes in Japan can trigger tsunamis called local and regional tsunamis that can devastate stretches of coastline but can do so in only a few minutes at a time Landslides The Tauredunum event was a large tsunami on Lake Geneva in 563 CE caused by sedimentary deposits destabilized by a landslide In the 1950s it was discovered that tsunamis larger than had previously been believed possible can be caused by giant submarine landslides These large volumes of rapidly displaced water transfer energy at a faster rate than the water can absorb Their existence was confirmed in 1958 when a giant landslide in Lituya Bay Alaska caused the highest wave ever recorded which had a height of 524 metres 1 719 ft 38 The wave did not travel far as it struck land almost immediately The wave struck three boats each with two people aboard anchored in the bay One boat rode out the wave but the wave sank the other two killing both people aboard one of them 39 40 41 Another landslide tsunami event occurred in 1963 when a massive landslide from Monte Toc entered the reservoir behind the Vajont Dam in Italy The resulting wave surged over the 262 metre 860 ft high dam by 250 metres 820 ft and destroyed several towns Around 2 000 people died 42 43 Scientists named these waves megatsunamis Some geologists claim that large landslides from volcanic islands e g Cumbre Vieja on La Palma Cumbre Vieja tsunami hazard in the Canary Islands may be able to generate megatsunamis that can cross oceans but this is disputed by many others In general landslides generate displacements mainly in the shallower parts of the coastline and there is conjecture about the nature of large landslides that enter the water This has been shown to subsequently affect water in enclosed bays and lakes but a landslide large enough to cause a transoceanic tsunami has not occurred within recorded history Susceptible locations are believed to be the Big Island of Hawaii Fogo in the Cape Verde Islands La Reunion in the Indian Ocean and Cumbre Vieja on the island of La Palma in the Canary Islands along with other volcanic ocean islands This is because large masses of relatively unconsolidated volcanic material occurs on the flanks and in some cases detachment planes are believed to be developing However there is growing controversy about how dangerous these slopes actually are 44 Volcanic eruptions Main article Volcanic tsunami Other than by landslides or sector collapse volcanoes may be able to generate waves by pyroclastic flow submergence caldera collapse or underwater explosions 45 Tsunamis have been triggered by a number of volcanic eruptions including the 1883 eruption of Krakatoa and the 2022 Hunga Tonga Hunga Ha apai eruption Over 20 of all fatalities caused by volcanism during the past 250 years are estimated to have been caused by volcanogenic tsunamis 46 Debate has persisted over the origins and source mechanisms of these types of tsunamis such as those generated by Krakatoa in 1883 46 and they remain lesser understood than their seismic relatives This poses a large problem of awareness and preparedness as exemplified by the eruption and collapse of Anak Krakatoa in 2018 which killed 426 and injured thousands when no warning was available It is still regarded that lateral landslides and ocean entering pyroclastic currents are most likely to generate the largest and most hazardous waves from volcanism 47 however field investigation of the Tongan event as well as developments in numerical modelling methods currently aim to expand the understanding of the other source mechanisms 48 49 Meteorological Main article Meteotsunami Some meteorological conditions especially rapid changes in barometric pressure as seen with the passing of a front can displace bodies of water enough to cause trains of waves with wavelengths These are comparable to seismic tsunamis but usually with lower energies Essentially they are dynamically equivalent to seismic tsunamis the only differences being 1 that meteotsunamis lack the transoceanic reach of significant seismic tsunamis and 2 that the force that displaces the water is sustained over some length of time such that meteotsunamis cannot be modelled as having been caused instantaneously In spite of their lower energies on shorelines where they can be amplified by resonance they are sometimes powerful enough to cause localised damage and potential for loss of life They have been documented in many places including the Great Lakes the Aegean Sea the English Channel and the Balearic Islands where they are common enough to have a local name rissaga In Sicily they are called marubbio and in Nagasaki Bay they are called abiki Some examples of destructive meteotsunamis include 31 March 1979 at Nagasaki and 15 June 2006 at Menorca the latter causing damage in the tens of millions of euros 50 Meteotsunamis should not be confused with storm surges which are local increases in sea level associated with the low barometric pressure of passing tropical cyclones nor should they be confused with setup the temporary local raising of sea level caused by strong on shore winds Storm surges and setup are also dangerous causes of coastal flooding in severe weather but their dynamics are completely unrelated to tsunami waves 50 They are unable to propagate beyond their sources as waves do Man made or triggered tsunamis See also Tsunami bomb There have been studies of the potential of the induction of and at least one actual attempt to create tsunami waves as a tectonic weapon In World War II the New Zealand Military Forces initiated Project Seal which attempted to create small tsunamis with explosives in the area of today s Shakespear Regional Park the attempt failed 51 There has been considerable speculation on the possibility of using nuclear weapons to cause tsunamis near an enemy coastline Even during World War II consideration of the idea using conventional explosives was explored Nuclear testing in the Pacific Proving Ground by the United States seemed to generate poor results Operation Crossroads fired two 20 kilotonnes of TNT 84 TJ bombs one in the air and one underwater above and below the shallow 50 m 160 ft waters of the Bikini Atoll lagoon Fired about 6 km 3 7 mi from the nearest island the waves there were no higher than 3 4 m 9 8 13 1 ft upon reaching the shoreline Other underwater tests mainly Hardtack I Wahoo deep water and Hardtack I Umbrella shallow water confirmed the results Analysis of the effects of shallow and deep underwater explosions indicate that the energy of the explosions does not easily generate the kind of deep all ocean waveforms which are tsunamis most of the energy creates steam causes vertical fountains above the water and creates compressional waveforms 52 Tsunamis are hallmarked by permanent large vertical displacements of very large volumes of water which do not occur in explosions Characteristics When the wave enters shallow water it slows down and its amplitude height increases The wave further slows and amplifies as it hits land Only the largest waves crest Tsunamis are caused by earthquakes landslides volcanic explosions glacier calvings and bolides They cause damage by two mechanisms the smashing force of a wall of water travelling at high speed and the destructive power of a large volume of water draining off the land and carrying a large amount of debris with it even with waves that do not appear to be large While everyday wind waves have a wavelength from crest to crest of about 100 metres 330 ft and a height of roughly 2 metres 6 6 ft a tsunami in the deep ocean has a much larger wavelength of up to 200 kilometres 120 mi Such a wave travels at well over 800 kilometres per hour 500 mph but owing to the enormous wavelength the wave oscillation at any given point takes 20 or 30 minutes to complete a cycle and has an amplitude of only about 1 metre 3 3 ft 53 This makes tsunamis difficult to detect over deep water where ships are unable to feel their passage The velocity of a tsunami can be calculated by obtaining the square root of the depth of the water in metres multiplied by the acceleration due to gravity approximated to 10 m s2 For example if the Pacific Ocean is considered to have a depth of 5000 metres the velocity of a tsunami would be 5000 10 50000 224 metres per second 730 ft s which equates to a speed of about 806 kilometres per hour 501 mph This is the formula used for calculating the velocity of shallow water waves Even the deep ocean is shallow in this sense because a tsunami wave is so long horizontally from crest to crest by comparison The reason for the Japanese name harbour wave is that sometimes a village s fishermen would sail out and encounter no unusual waves while out at sea fishing and come back to land to find their village devastated by a huge wave As the tsunami approaches the coast and the waters become shallow wave shoaling compresses the wave and its speed decreases below 80 kilometres per hour 50 mph Its wavelength diminishes to less than 20 kilometres 12 mi and its amplitude grows enormously in accord with Green s law Since the wave still has the same very long period the tsunami may take minutes to reach full height Except for the very largest tsunamis the approaching wave does not break but rather appears like a fast moving tidal bore 54 Open bays and coastlines adjacent to very deep water may shape the tsunami further into a step like wave with a steep breaking front When the tsunami s wave peak reaches the shore the resulting temporary rise in sea level is termed run up Run up is measured in metres above a reference sea level 54 A large tsunami may feature multiple waves arriving over a period of hours with significant time between the wave crests The first wave to reach the shore may not have the highest run up 55 About 80 of tsunamis occur in the Pacific Ocean but they are possible wherever there are large bodies of water including lakes However tsunami interactions with shorelines and the seafloor topography are extremely complex which leaves some countries more vulnerable than others For example the Pacific coasts of the United States and Mexico lie adjacent to each other but the United States has recorded ten tsunamis in the region since 1788 while Mexico has recorded twenty five since 1732 56 57 Similarly Japan has had more than a hundred tsunamis in recorded history while the neighboring island of Taiwan has registered only two in 1781 and 1867 58 59 Drawback An illustration of the rhythmic drawback of surface water associated with a wave It follows that a very large drawback may herald the arrival of a very large wave All waves have a positive and negative peak that is a ridge and a trough In the case of a propagating wave like a tsunami either may be the first to arrive If the first part to arrive at the shore is the ridge a massive breaking wave or sudden flooding will be the first effect noticed on land However if the first part to arrive is a trough a drawback will occur as the shoreline recedes dramatically exposing normally submerged areas The drawback can exceed hundreds of metres and people unaware of the danger sometimes remain near the shore to satisfy their curiosity or to collect fish from the exposed seabed A typical wave period for a damaging tsunami is about twelve minutes Thus the sea recedes in the drawback phase with areas well below sea level exposed after three minutes For the next six minutes the wave trough builds into a ridge which may flood the coast and destruction ensues During the next six minutes the wave changes from a ridge to a trough and the flood waters recede in a second drawback Victims and debris may be swept into the ocean The process repeats with succeeding waves Scales of intensity and magnitudeAs with earthquakes several attempts have been made to set up scales of tsunami intensity or magnitude to allow comparison between different events 60 Intensity scales The first scales used routinely to measure the intensity of tsunamis were the Sieberg Ambraseys scale 1962 used in the Mediterranean Sea and the Imamura Iida intensity scale 1963 used in the Pacific Ocean The latter scale was modified by Soloviev 1972 who calculated the tsunami intensity I according to the formula I 1 2 log 2 H a v displaystyle mathit I frac 1 2 log 2 mathit H av where H a v displaystyle mathit H av is the tsunami height in meters averaged along the nearest coastline with the tsunami height defined as the rise of the water level above the normal tidal level at the time of occurrence of the tsunami 61 This scale known as the Soloviev Imamura tsunami intensity scale is used in the global tsunami catalogues compiled by the NGDC NOAA 62 and the Novosibirsk Tsunami Laboratory as the main parameter for the size of the tsunami This formula yields I 2 for H a v displaystyle mathit H av 2 8 metres I 3 for H a v displaystyle mathit H av 5 5 metres I 4 for H a v displaystyle mathit H av 11 metres I 5 for H a v displaystyle mathit H av 22 5 metres etc In 2013 following the intensively studied tsunamis in 2004 and 2011 a new 12 point scale was proposed the Integrated Tsunami Intensity Scale ITIS 2012 intended to match as closely as possible to the modified ESI2007 and EMS earthquake intensity scales 63 64 Magnitude scales The first scale that genuinely calculated a magnitude for a tsunami rather than an intensity at a particular location was the ML scale proposed by Murty amp Loomis based on the potential energy 60 Difficulties in calculating the potential energy of the tsunami mean that this scale is rarely used Abe introduced the tsunami magnitude scale M t displaystyle mathit M t calculated from M t a log h b log R D displaystyle mathit M t a log h b log R mathit D where h is the maximum tsunami wave amplitude in m measured by a tide gauge at a distance R from the epicentre a b and D are constants used to make the Mt scale match as closely as possible with the moment magnitude scale 65 Tsunami heights Diagram showing several measures to describe a tsunami size including height inundation and run up Several terms are used to describe the different characteristics of tsunami in terms of their height 66 67 68 69 Amplitude Wave Height or Tsunami Height Refers to the height of a tsunami relative to the normal sea level at the time of the tsunami which may be tidal High Water or Low Water It is different from the crest to trough height which is commonly used to measure other type of wave height 70 Run up Height or Inundation Height The height reached by a tsunami on the ground above sea level Maximum run up height refers to the maximum height reached by water above sea level which is sometimes reported as the maximum height reached by a tsunami Flow Depth Refers to the height of tsunami above ground regardless of the height of the location or sea level Maximum Water Level Maximum height above sea level as seen from trace or water mark Different from maximum run up height in the sense that they are not necessarily water marks at inundation line limit Warnings and predictionsSee also Tsunami warning system Calculated travel time map for the 1964 Alaska tsunami in hours Drawbacks can serve as a brief warning People who observe drawback many survivors report an accompanying sucking sound can survive only if they immediately run for high ground or seek the upper floors of nearby buildings In 2004 ten year old Tilly Smith of Surrey England was on Maikhao beach in Phuket Thailand with her parents and sister and having learned about tsunamis recently in school told her family that a tsunami might be imminent Her parents warned others minutes before the wave arrived saving dozens of lives She credited her geography teacher Andrew Kearney In the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami drawback was not reported on the African coast or any other east facing coasts that it reached This was because the initial wave moved downwards on the eastern side of the megathrust and upwards on the western side The western pulse hit coastal Africa and other western areas A tsunami cannot be precisely predicted even if the magnitude and location of an earthquake is known Geologists oceanographers and seismologists analyse each earthquake and based on many factors may or may not issue a tsunami warning However there are some warning signs of an impending tsunami and automated systems can provide warnings immediately after an earthquake in time to save lives One of the most successful systems uses bottom pressure sensors attached to buoys which constantly monitor the pressure of the overlying water column Regions with a high tsunami risk typically use tsunami warning systems to warn the population before the wave reaches land On the west coast of the United States which is prone to tsunamis from the Pacific Ocean warning signs indicate evacuation routes In Japan the populace is well educated about earthquakes and tsunamis and along Japanese shorelines tsunami warning signs remind people of the natural hazards along with a network of warning sirens typically at the top of the cliffs of surrounding hills 71 The Pacific Tsunami Warning System is based in Honolulu Hawaiʻi It monitors Pacific Ocean seismic activity A sufficiently large earthquake magnitude and other information triggers a tsunami warning While the subduction zones around the Pacific are seismically active not all earthquakes generate a tsunami Computers assist in analysing the tsunami risk of every earthquake that occurs in the Pacific Ocean and the adjoining land masses Tsunami hazard sign at Bamfield British Columbia A tsunami warning sign in Kamakura Japan A Tsunami hazard sign Spanish English in Iquique Chile Tsunami Evacuation Route signage along U S Route 101 in WashingtonAs a direct result of the Indian Ocean tsunami a re appraisal of the tsunami threat for all coastal areas is being undertaken by national governments and the United Nations Disaster Mitigation Committee A tsunami warning system is being installed in the Indian Ocean One of the deep water buoys used in the DART tsunami warning system Computer models can predict tsunami arrival usually within minutes of the arrival time Bottom pressure sensors can relay information in real time Based on these pressure readings and other seismic information and the seafloor s shape bathymetry and coastal topography the models estimate the amplitude and surge height of the approaching tsunami All Pacific Rim countries collaborate in the Tsunami Warning System and most regularly practise evacuation and other procedures In Japan such preparation is mandatory for government local authorities emergency services and the population Along the United States west coast in addition to sirens warnings are sent on television and radio via the National Weather Service using the Emergency Alert System Possible animal reaction Further information Infrasound Animal reaction Some zoologists hypothesise that some animal species have an ability to sense subsonic Rayleigh waves from an earthquake or a tsunami If correct monitoring their behaviour could provide advance warning of earthquakes and tsunamis However the evidence is controversial and is not widely accepted There are unsubstantiated claims about the Lisbon quake that some animals escaped to higher ground while many other animals in the same areas drowned The phenomenon was also noted by media sources in Sri Lanka in the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake 72 73 It is possible that certain animals e g elephants may have heard the sounds of the tsunami as it approached the coast The elephants reaction was to move away from the approaching noise By contrast some humans went to the shore to investigate and many drowned as a result MitigationSee also Seawall A seawall at Tsu Mie Prefecture in Japan In some tsunami prone countries earthquake engineering measures have been taken to reduce the damage caused onshore Japan where tsunami science and response measures first began following a disaster in 1896 has produced ever more elaborate countermeasures and response plans 74 The country has built many tsunami walls of up to 12 metres 39 ft high to protect populated coastal areas Other localities have built floodgates of up to 15 5 metres 51 ft high and channels to redirect the water from an incoming tsunami However their effectiveness has been questioned as tsunamis often overtop the barriers The Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster was directly triggered by the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami when waves exceeded the height of the plant s sea wall 75 Iwate Prefecture which is an area at high risk from tsunami had tsunami barriers walls Taro sea wall totalling 25 kilometres 16 mi long at coastal towns The 2011 tsunami toppled more than 50 of the walls and caused catastrophic damage 76 The Okushiri Hokkaidō tsunami which struck Okushiri Island of Hokkaidō within two to five minutes of the earthquake on July 12 1993 created waves as much as 30 metres 100 ft tall as high as a 10 storey building The port town of Aonae was completely surrounded by a tsunami wall but the waves washed right over the wall and destroyed all the wood framed structures in the area The wall may have succeeded in slowing down and moderating the height of the tsunami but it did not prevent major destruction and loss of life 77 See also Tsunamis portal Oceans portalEmergency management Dealing with all humanitarian aspects of emergencies Higher Ground Project Worldwide campaign to celebrate the children who survived the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake tsunami Index of wave articles Kaikoura Canyon landslide tsunami hazard List of tsunamis List of natural disasters by death toll Lists of earthquakes Minoan eruption Major volcanic eruption around 1600 BCE Rogue wave Unexpectedly large transient ocean surface wave Seiche Standing wave in an enclosed or partially enclosed body of water Sneaker wave Disproportionately large coastal wave Supervolcano Volcano that has erupted 1000 cubic km of lava in a single eruption Tauredunum event Ancient Tsunami on Lake Geneva Tsunami Society Tsunami proof building List of tsunamis affecting New ZealandFootnotes Wells John C 1990 Longman pronunciation dictionary Harlow England Longman p 736 ISBN 978 0 582 05383 0 Entry tsunami tsunami Macmillan Dictionary Retrieved 2018 11 23 tsunami Merriam Webster Dictionary Retrieved 19 August 2019 tsunami Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Longman Retrieved 19 August 2019 Tsunami Terminology NOAA Archived from the original on 2011 02 25 Retrieved 2010 07 15 Barbara Ferreira April 17 2011 When icebergs capsize tsunamis may ensue Nature Archived from the original on 2011 11 04 Retrieved 2011 04 27 NASA Finds Japan Tsunami Waves Merged Doubling Power Jet Propulsion Laboratory Retrieved 3 November 2016 Tsunami 101 University of Washington Retrieved 1 December 2018 Definition of Tidal Wave What does tsunami mean Earth and Space Sciences University of Washington Retrieved 1 December 2018 Fradin Judith Bloom and Dennis Brindell 2008 Witness to Disaster Tsunamis Witness to Disaster Washington D C National Geographic Society pp 42 43 Archived from the original on 2012 04 06 a b Thucydides A History of the Peloponnesian War 3 89 1 4 a b c Smid T C April 1970 Tsunamis in Greek Literature Greece amp Rome Vol 17 2nd ed pp 100 104 a Jap tsunami tunami f tsu harbour nami waves Oxford English Dictionary Definition of Tidal Wave Retrieved 3 November 2016 Tidal The American Heritage Stedman s Medical Dictionary Houghton Mifflin Company 11 November 2008 Dictionary reference com al n d Dictionary com Unabridged v 1 1 Retrieved November 11 2008 Dictionary reference com Forty Feet High and It Kills Hawaii Five O Writ Robert C Dennis and Edward J Lakso Dir Michael O Herlihy CBS 8 Oct 1969 Television Seismic Sea Wave Tsunami Glossary Retrieved 3 November 2016 tsunamis Retrieved 3 November 2016 postcode 3001 corporateName Bureau of Meteorology address GPO Box 1289 Melbourne Victoria Australia Joint Australian Tsunami Warning Centre Retrieved 3 November 2016 Indian Ocean tsunami anniversary Memorial events held 26 December 2014 BBC News The 10 most destructive tsunamis in history Archived 2013 12 04 at the Wayback Machine Australian Geographic March 16 2011 Thucydides A History of the Peloponnesian War 3 89 5 Kelly Gavin 2004 Ammianus and the Great Tsunami The Journal of Roman Studies 94 141 141 167 doi 10 2307 4135013 hdl 20 500 11820 635a4807 14c9 4044 9caa 8f8e3005cb24 JSTOR 4135013 S2CID 160152988 Stanley Jean Daniel amp Jorstad Thomas F 2005 The 365 A D Tsunami Destruction of Alexandria Egypt Erosion Deformation of Strata and Introduction of Allochthonous Material Archived 2017 05 25 at the Wayback Machine Haugen K Lovholt F Harbitz C 2005 Fundamental mechanisms for tsunami generation by submarine mass flows in idealised geometries Marine and Petroleum Geology 22 1 2 209 217 doi 10 1016 j marpetgeo 2004 10 016 Tsunami Locations amp Occurrences National Weather Service Retrieved 16 January 2022 Krieger Lisa M 15 January 2022 Volcanic tsunamis Why they are so difficult to predict The Mercury News Retrieved 16 January 2022 Tsunamis National Geographic Retrieved 16 January 2022 Margaritondo G 2005 Explaining the physics of tsunamis to undergraduate and non physics students PDF European Journal of Physics 26 3 401 407 Bibcode 2005EJPh 26 401M doi 10 1088 0143 0807 26 3 007 S2CID 7512603 Archived from the original PDF on 2019 02 19 Voit S S 1987 Tsunamis Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics 19 1 217 236 Bibcode 1987AnRFM 19 217V doi 10 1146 annurev fl 19 010187 001245 Tia Ghose 2014 Are Ocean Asteroid Impacts Really a Serious Threat How do earthquakes generate tsunamis University of Washington Archived from the original on 2007 02 03 Lynnes C S Lay T 1988 Source Process of the Great 1977 Sumba Earthquake PDF Geophysical Research Letters American Geophysical Union 93 B11 13 407 13 420 Bibcode 1988JGR 9313407L doi 10 1029 JB093iB11p13407 Kanamori H 1971 Seismological evidence for a lithospheric normal faulting the Sanriku earthquake of 1933 Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors 4 4 298 300 Bibcode 1971PEPI 4 289K doi 10 1016 0031 9201 71 90013 6 Facts and figures how tsunamis form Archived 2013 11 05 at the Wayback Machine Australian Geographic March 18 2011 George Pararas Carayannis 1999 The Mega Tsunami of July 9 1958 in Lituya Bay Alaska Retrieved 2014 02 27 alaskashipwreck com Alaska Shipwrecks B alaskashipwreck com Alaska Shipwrecks S Dickson Ian 60 Years Ago The 1958 Earthquake and Lituya Bay Megatsunami University of Alaska Fairbanks Alaska Earthquake Center July 13 2018 Retrieved December 2 2018 Petley Dave Professor 2008 12 11 The Vaiont Vajont landslide of 1963 The Landslide Blog Archived from the original on 2013 12 06 Retrieved 2014 02 26 Duff Mark 2013 10 10 Italy Vajont anniversary Night of the tsunami BBC News Bbc co uk Retrieved 2014 02 27 Pararas Carayannis George 2002 Evaluation of the threat of mega tsunami generation from postulated massive slope failures of the island volcanoes on La Palma Canary Islands and on the island of Hawaii Science of Tsunami Hazards 20 5 251 277 Retrieved 7 September 2014 Paris R 2015 Source mechanisms of volcanic tsunamis Phil Trans R Soc 373 2053 Bibcode 2015RSPTA 37340380P doi 10 1098 rsta 2014 0380 PMID 26392617 S2CID 43187708 a b Latter J H 1981 Tsunamis of volcanic origin Summary of causes with particular reference to Krakatoa 1883 Bulletin Volcanologique 44 3 467 490 Bibcode 1981BVol 44 467L doi 10 1007 BF02600578 S2CID 129637214 Day Simon J 2015 Volcanic Tsunamis The Encyclopedia of Volcanoes Elsevier pp 993 1009 doi 10 1016 B978 0 12 385938 9 00058 4 ISBN 9780123859389 Retrieved 2022 03 21 Hayward Matthew W Whittaker C N Lane E M Power W L Popinet S White J D L 2022 Multilayer modelling of waves generated by explosive subaqueous volcanism Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences 22 2 617 637 Bibcode 2022NHESS 22 617H doi 10 5194 nhess 22 617 2022 Battershill L 2021 Numerical Simulations of a Fluidized Granular Flow Entry Into Water Insights Into Modeling Tsunami Generation by Pyroclastic Density Currents Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth 126 11 Bibcode 2021JGRB 12622855B doi 10 1029 2021JB022855 S2CID 243837214 permanent dead link a b Monserrat S Vilibic I Rabinovich A B 2006 Meteotsunamis atmospherically induced destructive ocean waves in the tsunami frequency band PDF Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences 6 6 1035 1051 Bibcode 2006NHESS 6 1035M doi 10 5194 nhess 6 1035 2006 Retrieved 23 November 2011 The Hauraki Gulf Marine Park Part 2 Inset to The New Zealand Herald 3 March 2010 p 9 Glasstone Samuel Dolan Philip 1977 Shock effects of surface and subsurface bursts The effects of nuclear weapons third ed Washington DC U S Department of Defense Energy Research and Development Administration Earthsci org Tsunamis a b Life of a Tsunami Western Coastal amp Marine Geology United States Geographical Survey 22 October 2008 Retrieved 2009 09 09 Prof Stephen A Nelson 28 January 2009 Tsunami Tulane University Retrieved 2009 09 09 Tsunamis in the United States WorldData Tsunamis in Mexico WorldData Tsunamis in Japan Worlddata info Tsunamis in Taiwan Worlddata info a b Gusiakov V Tsunami Quantification how we measure the overall size of tsunami Review of tsunami intensity and magnitude scales PDF Retrieved 2009 10 18 Soloviev S amp Go N 1974 English transl 1984 Catalogue of tsunamis on the western shore of the Pacific Ocean Canadian Translation of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences No 5077 310 p Center National Geophysical Data NGDC WDS Global Historical Tsunami Database NCEI Retrieved 3 November 2016 Lekkas E Andreadakis E Kostaki I amp Kapourani E 2013 A Proposal for a New Integrated Tsunami Intensity Scale ITIS 2012 Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America 103 2B 1493 1502 Bibcode 2013BuSSA 103 1493L doi 10 1785 0120120099 Katsetsiadou K N Andreadakis E and Lekkas E 2016 Tsunami intensity mapping applying the integrated Tsunami Intensity Scale ITIS2012 on Ishinomaki Bay Coast after the mega tsunami of Tohoku March 11 2011 Research in Geophysics 5 1 Abe K 1995 Estimate of Tsunami Run up Heights from Earthquake Magnitudes Tsunami progress in prediction disaster prevention and warning ISBN 978 0 7923 3483 5 Retrieved 2009 10 18 Tsunami Glossary Tsunami Terms 津波について 津波の高さの定義 Retrieved 2012 02 19 dead link Tsunami Amplitude Chanson H 2010 Tsunami Warning Signs on the Enshu Coast of Japan Shore amp Beach 78 1 52 54 ISSN 0037 4237 Lambourne Helen 2005 03 27 Tsunami Anatomy of a disaster BBC Kenneally Christine 2004 12 30 Surviving the Tsunami What Sri Lanka s animals knew that humans didn t Slate Magazine Journalist s Resource Research for Reporting from Harvard Shorenstein Center Content hks harvard edu 2012 05 30 Retrieved 2012 06 12 Phillip Lipscy Kenji Kushida and Trevor Incerti 2013 The Fukushima Disaster and Japan s Nuclear Plant Vulnerability in Comparative Perspective Archived 2013 10 29 at the Wayback Machine Environmental Science and Technology 47 May 6082 6088 Fukada Takahiro 21 September 2011 Iwate fisheries continue struggle to recover The Japan Times p 3 Retrieved 2016 09 18 George Pararas Carayannis The Earthquake and Tsunami of July 12 1993 in the Sea of Japan East Sea www drgeorgepc com Retrieved 2016 09 18 ReferencesIOC Tsunami Glossary by the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission IOC at the International Tsunami Information Centre ITIC of UNESCO Tsunami Terminology at NOAA In June 2011 the VOA Special English service of the Voice of America broadcast a 15 minute program on tsunamis as part of its weekly Science in the News series The program included an interview with an NOAA official who oversees the agency s tsunami warning system A transcript and MP3 of the program intended for English learners can be found at The Ever Present Threat of Tsunamis abelard org tsunamis tsunamis travel fast but not at infinite speed retrieved March 29 2005 Dudley Walter C amp Lee Min 1988 1st edition Tsunami ISBN 0 8248 1125 9 website Iwan W D editor 2006 Summary report of the Great Sumatra Earthquakes and Indian Ocean tsunamis of December 26 2004 and March 28 2005 Earthquake Engineering Research Institute EERI Publication 2006 06 11 chapters 100 page summary plus CD ROM with complete text and supplementary photographs EERI Report 2006 06 ISBN 1 932884 19 X website Kenneally Christine December 30 2004 Surviving the Tsunami Slate website Lambourne Helen March 27 2005 Tsunami Anatomy of a disaster BBC News website Macey Richard January 1 2005 The Big Bang that Triggered A Tragedy The Sydney Morning Herald p 11 quoting Dr Mark Leonard seismologist at Geoscience Australia Interactive Map of Historical Tsunamis from NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information Tappin D 2001 Local tsunamis Geoscientist 11 8 4 7 Girl 10 used geography lesson to save lives Telegraph co uk Philippines warned to prepare for Japan s tsunami Noypi phFurther readingBoris Levin Mikhail Nosov Physics of tsunamis Springer Dordrecht 2009 ISBN 978 1 4020 8855 1 Kontar Y A et al Tsunami Events and Lessons Learned Environmental and Societal Significance Springer 2014 ISBN 978 94 007 7268 7 print ISBN 978 94 007 7269 4 eBook Kristy F Tiampo Earthquakes simulations sources and tsunamis Birkhauser Basel 2008 ISBN 978 3 7643 8756 3 Linda Maria Koldau Tsunamis Entstehung Geschichte Pravention Tsunami development history and prevention C H Beck Munich 2013 C H Beck Reihe Wissen 2770 ISBN 978 3 406 64656 0 in German Walter C Dudley Min Lee Tsunami University of Hawaii Press 1988 1998 Tsunami University of Hawai i Press 1999 ISBN 0 8248 1125 9 ISBN 978 0 8248 1969 9 Charles L Mader Numerical Modeling of Water Waves CRC Press 2004 ISBN 0 8493 2311 8 External links Look up tsunami in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tsunamis World s Tallest Tsunami geology com Tsunami Data and Information National Centers for Environmental Information IOC Tsunami Glossary International Tsunami Information Center UNESCO Tsunami amp Earthquake Research at the USGS United States Geological Survey Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission Tsunami National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Wave That Shook The World Nova Recent and Historical Tsunami Events and Relevant Data Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory Raw Video Tsunami Slams Northeast Japan Associated Press Tsunami alert page in English from Japan Meteorological Agency Tsunami status page Archived 2011 03 14 at the Wayback Machine from USGS run Pacific Tsunami Warning Center Tsunami animation Geoscience Australia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tsunami amp oldid 1119806477, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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