Real tsunamis can reach a maximum height of ~30 meters, and most are much smaller. What makes them deadly is that once the water starts coming in, it KEEPS coming in, and with a great deal of force. A gazillion tons of rapidly-moving water, even if it's only a few meters deep, is an unstoppable killing force.
The answer is NO, so that is NO number three. Toby Dewhurst explains it well, ie the tsunami goes all the way to the bottom so you can't get underneath it. I used to body surf and you can dive under normal waves, but you cannot go under tsunami.
No, You Can't Outrun a Tsunami. Yet a myth persists that a person could outrun a tsunami. That's just not possible, tsunami safety experts told LiveScience, even for Usain Bolt, one of the world's quickest sprinters. Getting to high ground or high elevation is the only way to survive the monster waves.
Tsunami waves can continously flood or inundate low lying coastal areas for hours. Flooding can extend inland by 300 meters (~1000 feet) or more, covering large expanses of land with water and debris. Tsunami inundation is the horizontal, inland penetration of waves from the shoreline.
The safest place for a vessel in the event of a tsunami is offshore in deep water. So, if your boat is offshore in deep water, you can easily survive a tsunami, but if you're near shore in shallow water it will probably be catastrophic.
We are very unlikely in South Florida to suffer damage to an earthquake." Tuesday's earthquake moved the earth more than 70 feet under the ocean, but why no tsunami? "So as a result, you get next to no reports of tsunamis." Most of the faults in the Atlantic Ocean are of the non-tsunami forming type.
As a tsunami approaches shorelines, water may recede from the coast, exposing the ocean floor, reefs and fish. 3. Abnormal ocean activity, a wall of water, and an approaching tsunami create a loud "roaring" sound similar to that of a train or jet aircraft.
The tsunami may be perceived as nothing more than a gentle rise and fall of the sea surface. For the same reason of low amplitude and very long periods in the deep ocean, tsunami waves cannot be seen nor detected from the air. From the sky, tsunami waves cannot be distinguished from ordinary ocean waves.
In some places a tsunami may cause the sea to rise vertically only a few inches or feet. In other places tsunamis have been known to surge vertically as high as 100 feet (30 meters). Most tsunamis cause the sea to rise no more than 10 feet (3 meters).
A Cruise ship in port would get damaged and destroyed like any other ship in port when a tsunami hits. Tsunami, when they are out in the deep ocean, are not massive waves and walls of water. they are a large impulse wave of large wavelength and periodicity racing through the water at the speeds of a jet airliner.
NOAA advises that since tsunami wave activity is imperceptible in the open ocean, vessels should not return to port if they are at sea and a tsunami warning has been issued for the area. Tsunamis can cause rapid changes in water level and unpredictable, dangerous currents in harbors and ports.
Tsunamis: the Shoaling Process
As mentioned earlier, Tsunami waves become dangerous only when they get close to the coast: the height of a Tsunami wave grows larger as the water becomes more and more shallow in a wave shoaling process.As a tsunami approaches shorelines, water may recede from the coast, exposing the ocean floor, reefs and fish. 3. Abnormal ocean activity, a wall of water, and an approaching tsunami create a loud "roaring" sound similar to that of a train or jet aircraft.
TIMELINE: The 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami
The Philippines was spared because there are islands and land masses between the Indian Ocean and the Philippine archipelago that blocked the tsunami, according to Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (Phivolcs) director Renato Solidum.Tsunamis occur most often in the Pacific Ocean and Indonesia because the Pacific Rim bordering the Ocean has a large number of active submarine earthquake zones. However, tsunamis have also occurred recently in the Mediterranean Sea region and are expected in the Caribbean Sea as well.
Since 1933, 31 tsunamis have been observed in Crescent City. Four of those caused damage, and one of them, in March 1964, remains the “largest and most destructive recorded tsunami to ever strike the United States Pacific Coast,” according to the University of Southern California's Tsunami Research Center.
Be Safe AFTER
- Listen to local alerts and authorities for information on areas to avoid and shelter locations.
- Avoid wading in floodwater, which can contain dangerous debris.
- Be aware of the risk of electrocution.
- Stay away from damaged buildings, roads, and bridges.
- Document property damage with photographs.
Experts believe that a receding ocean may give people as much as five minutes' warning to evacuate the area. Remember that a tsunami is a series of waves and that the first wave may not be the most dangerous. The danger from a tsunami can last for several hours after the arrival of the first wave.
IF YOU ARE UNDER A TSUNAMI WARNING:
- First, protect yourself from an Earthquake.
- Get to high ground as far inland as possible.
- Be alert to signs of a tsunami, such as a sudden rise or draining of ocean waters.
- Listen to emergency information and alerts.
- Evacuate: DO NOT wait!
- If you are in a boat, go out to sea.
Why does the water level drop before the tsunami hits? Because it is like a tide, the tide goes out before it comes in. As the tsunami approaches water is drawn back from the beach to effectively help feed the wave. In a tide the wave is so long that this happens slowly, over a few hours.
A: Tsunamis are disasters that can be generated in all of the world's oceans, inland seas, and in any large body of water. Tsunamis are generated, by shallow earthquakes all around the Pacific, but those from earthquakes in the tropical Pacific tend to be modest in size.
Indian Ocean tsunami of 2004, tsunami that hit the coasts of several countries of South and Southeast Asia in December 2004. The tsunami and its aftermath were responsible for immense destruction and loss on the rim of the Indian Ocean. did you know? The earthquake that caused the tsunami lasted almost 10 minutes.
Warning Signs. An earthquake is a natural tsunami warning. If you feel a strong quake do not stay in a place where you are exposed to a tsunami. If you hear of an earthquake be aware of the possibility of a tsunami and listen to the radio or television for additional information.
That warning, he says, can go out within three to five minutes of the undersea earthquake and gives an early indication of its potential to cause a tsunami which may do damage. "If the earthquake is big it could be moving quite a lot of sea floor — often along a subduction zone", he explains.
Generally tsunamis arrive, not as giant breaking waves, but as a forceful rapid increase in water levels that results in violent flooding. However, when tsunami waves become extremely large in height, they savagely attack coastlines, causing devastating property damage and loss of life.