Tsunami is a series of ocean waves generated by
any rapid large-scale disturbance of the sea
water. Most tsunamis are generated by
earthquakes, but they may also be caused by
volcanic eruptions, landslides, undersea slumps
or meteor impacts.
The waves radiate outward in all directions from
the disturbance and can propagate across entire
ocean basins. Tsunami waves are
distinguished from ordinary ocean waves by their
great length between peaks. The speed at which
tsunamis travel depends on the ocean depth. A
tsunami can exceed 500 mph in the deep ocean but
slows to 20 or 30 mph in the shallow water near
land.
In the deep ocean, a tsunami is barely
noticeable and will only cause a small and slow
rising and falling of the sea surface as it
passes. Only as it approaches land does a
tsunami become a hazard. As the tsunami
approaches land and shallow water, the waves
slow down and become compressed, causing them to
grow in height. In the best of cases, the
tsunami comes onshore like a quickly rising tide
and causes a gentle flooding of low-lying
coastal areas.
(Click
here to view a high resolution version of NOAA
image of a Deep-ocean Assessment and
Reporting of Tsunamis (DART)
buoy being deployed in the Pacific Ocean
from the NOAA ship Ronald H. Brown in October
1999.
The Pacific Basin—the area served by the
existing tsunami warning system established by
the Pacific rim countries and operated by NOAA
in Hawaii.
The Pacific Basin tsunami warning system did not
detect a tsunami in the Indian Ocean since there
are no buoys in place here. Even without a way
to detect whether a tsunami had formed in the
Indian Ocean, NOAA officials tried to get the
message out to other nations not a part of its
Pacific warning system to alert them of the
possibility of a tsunami. (NOVA
and Indian Ocean Tsunami)
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