A
tsunami is a large ocean wave that is caused by sudden motion on the ocean
floor. This sudden motion could be an earthquake, a powerful volcanic
eruption, or an
underwater landslide. The impact of a large meteorite could also cause a tsunami.
Tsunamis travel across the open ocean at great speeds and build into large
deadly waves in the shallow water of a shoreline.
Subduction Zones are Potential Tsunami
Locations
Most
tsunamis are caused by earthquakes generated in a subduction
zone, an area where an oceanic plate is being forced down into the mantle by plate tectonic forces.
The friction between the subducting plate and the overriding plate is enormous.
This friction prevents a slow and steady rate of subduction and instead the two
plates become "stuck".
Accumulated Seismic Energy
As
the stuck plate continues to descend into the mantle the motion causes a slow
distortion of the overriding plage. The result is an accumulation of energy
very similar to the energy stored in a compressed spring. Energy can accumulate
in the overriding plate over a long period of time - decades or even centuries.
Earthquake Causes Tsunami
Energy
accumulates in the overriding plate until it exceeds the frictional forces
between the two stuck plates. When this happens, the overriding plate snaps
back into an unrestrained position. This sudden motion is the cause of the
tsunami - because it gives an enormous shove to the overlying water. At the
same time, inland areas of the overriding plate are suddenly lowered.
Tsunami Races Away From the Epicenter
The
moving wave begins travelling out from where the earthquake has occurred. Some
of the water travels out and across the ocean basin, and, at the same time,
water rushes landward to flood the recently lowered shoreline.
Tsunamis Travel Rapidly Across Ocean Basis
Tsunamis
travel swiftly across the open ocean. The map below shows how a tsunami produced by an
earthquake along the coast of Chile in 1960 traveled across the
Pacific Ocean, reaching Hawaii in about 15 hours and Japan in less than 24
hours.
One
of the most destructive tsunamis took place on December 26, 2004, after an
earthquake of magnitude 9.1 displaced the ocean floor off the Indonesian island of Sumatra.
Two hours later, waves as high as 9 metres (30 feet) struck the eastern coasts
of India and Sri Lanka, some 1,200 km (750 miles) away. Within seven
hours of the quake, waves washed ashore on the Horn of Africa, more than 3,000
km (1,800 miles) away on the other side of the Indian Ocean. More than 200,000 people were killed,
most of them on Sumatra but thousands of others in Thailand,
India, and Sri Lanka and smaller numbers in Malaysia, Myanmar,
Bangladesh, Maldives, Somalia, and other locations (see Indian Ocean tsunami of 2004).On March 11, 2011, seafloor displacement resulting from a magnitude-9.0 earthquake in the Japan Trench of the Pacific Ocean created a large tsunami that devastated much of the eastern coast of Japan’s main island of Honshu. Waves measuring as much as 10 metres (33 feet) high struck the city of Sendai and other low-lying coastal regions of Miyagi prefecture, as well as coastal areas in the prefectures of Iwate, Fukushima, Ibaraki, and Chiba. Several hours later, waves measuring 3.3 to 3.6 metres (11 to 12 feet) were detected in the Hawaiian Islands chain, and waves measuring about 2.7 metres (9 feet) high washed ashore along the West Coast of the United States (see Japan earthquake and tsunami of 2011).
Previous to these two events, the most destructive tsunami was caused by the spectacular explosive eruption of the Krakatoa (Krakatau) volcano on August 26 and 27, 1883. This series of blasts, which submerged the island of Rakata between Sumatra and Java, created waves as high as 35 metres (115 feet) in many East Indies localities, killing more than 36,000 people.
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