Teletsunami or Distant Tsunami 1


Teletsunami or Distant Tsunami 1 : A tsunami originating from a distant source, generally more than 1000 km away. Far less frequent, but potentially much more hazardous are Pacific-wide or distant tsunamis. These occur when the disturbance that generates the tsunami is sufficiently great. Usually starting as a local tsunami that causes extensive destruction near the source, these waves continue to travel across the entire ocean basin with sufficient energy to cause additional casualties and destruction on shores more than a thousand km from the source. In the last two hundred years, there have been at least seventeen destructive Pacific-wide tsunamis. The most destructive Pacific-wide tsunami of recent history was generated by a massive earthquake off the coast of Chile on May 22, 1960. All Chilean coastal towns between the 36th and 44th parallels were either destroyed or heavily damaged by the action of the tsunami and the quake. The combined tsunami and earthquake toll included 2,000 killed, 3,000 injured, 2,000,000 homeless, and $550 million damage. Off the coastal town of Corral, Chile, the waves were estimated to be 20 meters (67 feet) high. The tsunami caused 61 deaths in Hawaii, 20 in the Philippines, and 100 or more in Japan. Estimated damages were US$50 million in Japan, US$24 million in Hawaii and several more millions along the west coast of the United States and Canada. Distant wave heights varied from slight oscillations in some areas to 12 meters (40 feet) at Pitcairn Island; 11 meters at Hilo, Hawaii; and 6 meters at some places in Japan.A Pacific-wide tsunami today, similar in size to the May 1960 event, could easily have catastrophic consequences
No records Found
afaatim.com copyright © April 2016 Dr.K.R.Kamaal. All rights reserved