Questions tagged [tsunami]

A tsunami is a series of waves that occur right after the displacement of a large amount of water. Use this tag for questions about tsunamis, why they happen, and how they occur.

A tsunami is a series of waves that occur right after the displacement of a large amount of water. Some examples of this are an earthquake, a volcanic eruption, or an underwater explosion.

Tsunamis were first discovered as early as 462 BC. Greek historian Thucydides inquired in his book History of the Peloponnesian War about the cause of tsunamis, and thought that an earthquake might be the cause:

The cause of such inundation, for my part, I take to be this: that the earthquake, where it was very great, did there send off the sea; and the sea returning on a sudden, caused the water to come on with greater violence. And it seemeth unto me that without an earthquake such an accident could never happen.

Some notable recent tsunamis are: the 2011 Japan tsunami, the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, and the 1980 Spirit Lake "megatsunami"

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Mega-tsunami, what is the greatest possible height of a tsunami?

The notion of a taller-than-skyscraper, so called "megatsunami" is not new - with the often-reported 524m (1720 feet) high Lituya Bay tsunami of 1958 is sometimes referred as such (despite the wave not reaching that high). In many movies (and some…
user889
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Is it inevitable that a mega tsunami will hit America?

According to a documentary, "Mega Tsunami - A wave of destruction", most mega tsunamis are caused by landslides creating tsunamis 10 times the size as those caused by earthquakes. It was said that there is a volcano in the Canary islands that holds…
Kenshin
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Is Atlanta too far inland and too far above sea level to be affected by the comet in "Deep Impact"?

In "Deep Impact", the president says that "New York City, Boston, Atlanta, Philadelphia, all will be destroyed". New York and Boston are on the water and would be in danger from a tsunami of any size, Philadelphia is 39 feet above sea level and 50…
philosodad
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How can a tsunami be 'hot'?

I am reading about the Samoan tsunami of 2009, in which several independent accounts by survivors said that the wave was 'hot'. They were running for their lives at the time, so were very remiss in failing to actually measure the water temperature.…
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Does the Iribarren criteria apply for tsunamis?

The Iribarren number (slope ratio/√wave steepness) gives appearance of breaking waves. If the number is low, a spilling breaker occurs. If it is moderate, a spectacular plunger occurs. If it is large, a partially breaking or non breaking wave…
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Tsunami Characteristics

I got datasets about Tsunami events. According to International Tsunami Information Center and Indian Ocean UNESCO Tsunami center, for an earthquake to cause Tsunami it should have a large magnitude (> 6.5) and shallow focal depth ( < 100 km ). But…
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How do scientists determine the height measurement of a tsunami wave after the event?

How is information concerning the height of a tsunami obtained? Does not the incoming and out going wave scour the area of natural and man made structures, hindering an accurate measurement?
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Was the small Vanuatu Tsunami detected by remote monitors in the ocean before it reached land?

The 20-Nov-2017 Reuters News item Small tsunamis detected in New Caledonia and Vanuatu after magnitude 7 undersea quake says: Small tsunamis were detected and waves may have reached up to one meter (three feet) above the high tide level in parts of…
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