Many people are killed by tsunamis when they are hit by floating debris or smashed into buildings or walls. If you are far enough offshore, there is nothing being tossed around that can kill you. Tsunamis can last for a while.
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.
The tsunami that struck Indonesia's Sunda Strait on Saturday night was the latest in a series of disasters in the vast archipelago nation this year. Other tragedies have included earthquakes that flattened parts of the tourist island of Lombok, and an earthquake and tsunami that killed thousands on Sulawesi island.
Tsunamis (pronounced soo-ná-mees), also known as seismic sea waves (mistakenly called “tidal waves”), are a series of enormous waves created by an underwater disturbance such as an earthquake, landslide, volcanic eruption, or meteorite. A tsunami can strike anywhere along most of the U.S. coastline.
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.
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.
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 large tsunami can flood low-lying coastal land over a mile from the coast. What does a tsunami look like when it reaches shore? Normally, a tsunami appears as a rapidly advancing or receding tide. In some cases, a wall of water or series of breaking waves may form.
- Avoid building or living in buildings within several hundred feet of the coastline.
- If you do live in a coastal area, elevate your home to help reduce damage.
- Take precautions to prevent flooding.
- Have an engineer check your home and advise about ways to make it more resistant to tsunami water.
The Hazard
Earthquake can be defined as the shaking of earth caused by waves moving on and below the earth's surface and causing: surface faulting, tremors vibration, liquefaction, landslides, aftershocks and/or tsunamis. Aggravating factors are the time of the event and the number and intensity of aftershocks.Tsunamis do not occur in a specific season. They may occur anytime a earthquake occurs in the ocean.
A tsunami is a catastrophic sea wave that achieves landfall and causes destruction. Its source is a major geographic event under sea level, such as an earthquake, volcano eruption, or landslide. Though frequently called tidal waves, tsunamis have nothing to do with ocean tides.
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.
Earthquakes, the usual cause of tsunamis, cannot be predicted in time, but can be predicted in space. Neither historical records nor current scientific theory can accurately tell us when earthquakes will occur. Therefore, tsunami prediction can only be done after an earthquake has occurred.
Usually, it takes an earthquake with a Richter magnitude exceeding 7.5 to produce a destructive tsunami. Most tsunamis are generated by shallow, great earthquakes at subductions zones. More than 80% of the world's tsunamis occur in the Pacific along its Ring of Fire subduction zones.
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.
Write it as a first-person report. You are a victim. Tell what happens, how you prepared, how that preparation failed, what is the extent of the tsunami in your area, maybe talk about recovery. Do research on tsunamis and bring those details into your report.
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.
Tsunamis are detected and measured by coastal tide gages and by tsunami buoys in the deep ocean. The tide gages measure the tsunami wave directly. In the deep ocean, sensors on the ocean floor detect the pressure signature of tsunami waves as they pass by.
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.