Tsunami Hazard to Coastal Populations
This page is mainly concerned with
prevention of
future tsunami disasters by identifying communities that are vulnerable
to tsunami and ensuring that people know what to do in the event of a
tsunami warning.
Australia
USGS:
Map of very recent Earthquakes in the Australian region and
current tsunami warnings for the Pacific Ocean - both US sites.
Historical Australian earthquakes.
Joint Australian Tsunami Warning Centre -
Australian Regional Tsunami Warnings
- "
In the event of a tsunami warning for Australia for which you
urgently need extra advice, please listen to your local radio and TV
announcements for emergency services messages" - best to be better
prepared than this. The
2007 Solomons event showed a serious lack of community preparedness and shortcomings with relying on radio or TV !
Reduce your personal risk - May 2008
Be alert and prepared - not alarmed. This is a
low-probability, high-consequence event that calls for a little
preparation in case a warning is issued.
These are similar to the things that people in tropical locations do to prepare for cyclone warnings.
Although the likelihood of a mega-tsunami is low there are some simple
things you can do to significantly reduce the risk of fatality:
- Identify if you live, work or play in a vulnerable location -
find out the approximate height above mean sea level. As a rough guide coastal and estuary land less than 10 metres above mean sea level is "at risk" and 5m or less should be considered "vulnerable". Google Maps has a sea level rise add-on
that can give a very rough guide (detailed modelling is needed to assess vulnerability as there are many factors that influence tsunami inundation). The following links are to JPG screen
snapshots from Google Maps - red shows 5m contour and yellow shows 10m contour: - Narrabeen, Manly, Sydney , Brisbane, Gold Coast, Sunshine Coast, Nowra, Wollongong, Gosford, Newcastle and Forster.

- Identify a safe location to go to in the event of a tsunami
warning - a nearby hill or headland or at least the third storey of a
reinforced concrete building
- Plan an evacuation route to reach that safe location (avoid the need for driving a car because the roads will likely gridlock)
- Subscribe to the email or RSS warning service of the US Pacific Tsunami Warning Center
- Consider subscribing to a mobile phone alert service like the Tsunami Institute in Germany or Tsunami SMS (expect about 5 warnings a month for the Pacific Ocean and maybe one per year relevant to your location) . In Australia Early Warning Network offers a free SMS service that relays tsunami warnings issued by the Australian Bureau of Meteorology. The service also covers other risks such as bushfires and cyclones.
- If you receive a tsunami warning that is relevant to your location, or feel an earthquake, quickly get your evacuation plan into action. If a mega-tsunami does inundate the area do not return to low-lying land for at least 2 hours as other waves are likely to follow after the first wave and each wave can last for 20 to 30 minutes.
- Approach your local council and SES and ask them to develop a tsunami
warning action plan and infrastructure (such as a public address
system) and to have inundation modelling carried out. See the [NSW] State Tsunami Plan ( pdf 2311kb) - issued in 2005.
- Most importantly, relax and enjoy living near the ocean, knowing that you have made basic preparations for a worst case scenario
Draft presentation on the tsunami hazard to Sydney (March 2008)
Includes recent computer modelling of a mega-tsunami from the Tongan
Trench that has similar features to the 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami.
2008 additions
- Geoscience Australia tsunami page with a brochure link. Opinion: the tsunami hazard to the east coast appears to be under-rated.
- Echoes of ancient tsunamis
(2006) Along the eastern Australian coastline, where most
Australians live, the tsunami threat comes from several sources.
Although they have produced few historical tsunamis, the Solomons
trench, the New Hebrides trench off Vanuatu, the Tonga–Kermadec
trench north of New Zealand, the Alpine fault in New Zealand and the
Puysegur trench south of New Zealand may all have the potential to
produce earthquake-generated tsunamis capable of reaching Australian
shores. More work needs to be done to characterise the earthquake mechanisms in these regions... The
steep slopes of the continental shelf on the eastern Australian margin
may induce underwater landslides capable of producing localised
tsunamis...
- The Joint Australian Tsunami Warning Centre - The establishment of the fully functional Australian Tsunami Warning
System is a four-year project funded by the Federal Government that is
due to be completed in June 2009. At the completion of the project
Australia will have considerably improved earthquake and tsunami
detection equipment in Australia and around the region, enhanced
scientific modelling of tsunami, a responsive warning system, and
increased public awareness and community preparedness.
- EMA: Australian Tsunami Alert System
- Tsunami warning system will 'stop false alarms'
- Science of Tsunami Hazards: TSUNAMI SCENARIO SIMULATOR: A TOOL FOR ENSURING EFFECTIVE DISASTER MANAGEMENT AND COASTAL EVACUATION IN A MULTILANGUAGE SOCIETY
- 28 Aug 08 A survivor of the Indian Ocean Tsunami has started a Facebook page to raise awareness of the risk: Tsunami Aware Beach-Lovers.
-
The Joint Australian Tsunami Warning Centre
- Opinion: the "alert" side of things is progressing well. The
"response" and "preparedness" aspects are not so good!
May 08: This
report reaches a similar conclusion - Taking a punch: Building a more resilient Australia
- report "We need greater clarity on the precise management and
coordination arrangements in the case, for example, of a devastating
tsunami impacting on southeast Australia...The Commonwealth agency seen
to be responsible for this, Emergency Management Australia (EMA), has
no mandate, legislation or Cabinet endorsement with which to take
command. The delivery of EMA functions for the most part is the result
of goodwill on behalf of other agencies. This is clearly not a satisfactory situation."
"A $70 million early warning system is being set up to record any
earthquakes that could trigger giant waves to strike the NSW coast but
it’s not clear how communities get informed, particularly if a
night-time incident occurred..."
Update July 2006 with advice from EMA (see also Australian news)
Emergency Management Australia is working on an "
Australian Tsunami Warning System"
- good
news and hopefully we will soon see the implementation of civil warning systems for Sydney coastlines.
Key points (thanks Mark Sullivan, Director Capability Development EMA):
- EMA is working with States and Territories and relevant industry,
education, volunteer and community sectors to enhance community
preparedness through awareness raising, education and training.
- Over
four years, from July 2005 to June 2009, the Bureau of Meteorology,
Geoscience Australia (GA) and Emergency Management Australia (EMA) will
implement a comprehensive end-to-end Australian Tsunami Warning System
(ATWS). The ATWS will be delivered through enhancements to the existing
Australian Tsunami Alert Service (ATAS), and will comprise upgraded
seismic and sea level monitoring networks, computer modelling of
tsunami propagation to aid impact forecasting, and national awareness
raising and capacity building initiatives. The ATWS, once fully
operational, will deliver timely and accurate warnings to the
Australian community in such a way as to elicit an appropriate response
from those at risk.
- By 2007 estimates will have been made of the credible limit of offshore tsunami wave height for the entire Australian coastline.
- Inundation modelling is being undertaken for some West Australian coastal communities
- Australian Emergency Management Committee's Tsunami Working
Group
will meet in September 2006 with a view to agreeing on a national
strategy for awareness raising and capacity building. Some local
jurisdictions have already developed hazard specific arrangements for
tsunami, and EMA is committed to working with all jurisdictions to
enhance these already existing arrangements to effectively respond to a
rapid onset event such as tsunami, including the eduction sector.
- Communities and key stakeholders have been, and continue to be,
engaged; and a national picture of tsunami risk is being developed. In
the very near future, the Australian community can expect to be
provided greater access to relevant
awareness material, and those with key responsibilities will further
benefit from tailored education, training and exercising. On this
basis, the Australian community will come ever closer to being a
'Tsunami Aware Community', and thus be better prepared to respond
appropriately to signs of tsunami in Australia and overseas, as well as
respond in a timely and appropriate way to ATWS warnings.
Related links
- Australian Journal of Emergency Management:
- Observations on Tsunami disaster in Papua New Guinea - 1998
- After the Wave:
A wake up warning for Australian coastal locations King and Gurtner
consider Australia’s vulnerability to tsunamis and storm
surges...The increasing emphasis on disaster reduction through
mitigation
and preparedness has put greater responsibility on local government and relevant authorities to ensure
that such lessons are understood and used to mitigate future contingencies. The tsunami is a warning that
reinforces current mitigation efforts, and in particular, the long-term goals of education and the planning
of coastal land use.
- Tsunami risk mitigation and the issue of public awareness (PDF) - Is Sydney at risk from tsunami
flooding and if so, from where? Approximately 330,000 people in New South Wales
live within 1km of the ocean or a coastal river and at an elevation of
no more than +10 metres above sea level (Molino Stewart, 2005). These
people, their homes,
businesses and all infrastructure are vulnerable to the effects of tsunami inundation...
- Managing tsunami risk in coastal communities: identifying predictors of preparedness.
- Early warning systems: reframing the discussion - The emphasis on early warning systems has turned attention and funding to the current
capabilities and developments in science and technology, and
unfortunately, distracted us from the central issue of addressing the
real needs of the communities and people at risk.
- NSW State Emergency Services: Tsunamis - The
SES is the designated combat agency for tsunami. Following is
information on what is a tsunami and how you can be prepared should one
occur... [NSW] State Tsunami Plan ( pdf 2311kb) - issued in 2005
Quantify the threat to Australian coastlines
from tsunami
- Develop a project plan for tsunami research and mitigation
- Provide technical and operational advice and oversee the
implementation
of the plan
- Conduct further research into geological evidence of tsunami
along the
Australian coastline
- Conduct further research into archaeological and historical
evidence of
tsunami affecting coastal Aboriginal populations.
- Liaise with international experts on the vulnerability of the
Australian
coastline to tsunami
- Arrange computer simulations to determine the likely effects
of
tsunami
on various parts of the Australian coast
- Review tsunami warning and mitigation systems in place in
Japan
and the
West Coast of North America.
- Develop a proposal to implement an appropriate tsunami
warning
and mitigation
system in Australia.
(Extract from "
Australian
Spaceguard Survey: the Australian
component of an international effort to detect Earth-threatening
asteroids
and comets" - May 1999.
Responses from
Australian politicians.)
Australian news items (latest at top)
- 31 Oct 08 ABC: Tsunami detection centre opens in Melbourne + Tsunami warning centre launched - "Australia has its own capacity to detect these tsunami events and so
the country is much better prepared in the event that we do have
another tsunami..." [opinion: this is warning, not civil preparation]
- 28 Oct 08 The Herald: Scientists to survey coast for tsunami research - fifteen
scientists will leave Newcastle next month aboard the CSIRO research
ship Southern Surveyor to investigate the potential for underwater landslides to trigger tsunamis along Australia's east coast...survey the continental slope between northern NSW and the Sunshine Coast [i.e not Sydney].
- 28 Oct 08 Pacific Magazine: Experts Assist PNG’s Tsunami Warning and Mitigation System.
- 20 Oct 08 AFP: Powerful quake rattles Tonga + PTWC: Tsunami Bulletin - "NO DESTRUCTIVE WIDESPREAD TSUNAMI THREAT EXISTS..."
- 15 Oct 08 9News: Tsunami warning system almost functional (but not civil response)
- 12 Oct 08 Powerboat World: Boost for tsunami detection capability in WA.
- 30 Sep 08 (this item overwhelmed by Wall St!) PTWC: AN EARTHQUAKE HAS OCCURRED WITH THESE PRELIMINARY PARAMETERS
ORIGIN TIME - 1519Z 29 SEP 2008, COORDINATES -
30.1 SOUTH 176.8 WEST,
DEPTH - 7 KM
LOCATION - KERMADEC ISLANDS REGION
MAGNITUDE - 6.9
EVALUATION - NO DESTRUCTIVE WIDESPREAD TSUNAMI THREAT EXISTS
BASED ON HISTORICAL EARTHQUAKE AND TSUNAMI DATA. Comment: This is
the Tonga region that is potentially a mega-tsunami source for Australia (Google Earth). Fortunately the magnitude of the earthquake was insufficient to cause an ocean-wide tsunami.
- 18 Sep 08 ABC Radio: New Pacific disaster risk management website launched - SOPAC.
- 17 Sep 08 Illawara Mercury: BBC [tsunami] documentary based on UOW professor's claims.
- 9 Sep 08 News.com.au: Strong quake off Vanuatu. Pacific Tsunami Warning Center: ORIGIN TIME - 1852Z 08 SEP 2008
COORDINATES - 13.5 SOUTH 166.9 EAST,
DEPTH - 146 KM, LOCATION
- VANUATU ISLANDS
MAGNITUDE - 7.1, EVALUATION: A
DESTRUCTIVE TSUNAMI WAS NOT GENERATED BASED ON EARTHQUAKE AND
HISTORICAL TSUNAMI DATA.
- 2 Sep 08 Environmental Expert: Australia’s ocean research ship open to Sydneysiders
- “This year the ship has ... discovered active submarine
volcanoes in Fiji and deployed Tsunami warning buoys in the Tasman
Sea.”
- 1 Sep 08 Google Earth: The south west Pacific has been very active in the last few days - see image

- 28 Aug 08 A survivor of the Indian Ocean Tsunami has started a Facebook page to raise awareness of the risk: Tsunami Aware Beach-Lovers.
- 26 Aug 08 Canberra Times: Mine boom our bust, staff say
- Staff at the Canberra-based national geological institution which
also monitors earthquake and tsunami risks across the Pacific region
will hold a lunch-time protest rally today...
- 25 Aug 08 State Emergency Services of NSW: SES Wants to Hear 1960 Tsunami Recollections (PDF)
- 22 Aug 08 Early Warning Network offers a free SMS service that relays tsunami warnings issued by the Australian Bureau of Meteorology.
- 15 Aug 08 Breakthrough! Illawara Mercury: Tsunami a real threat to Illawarra: professor - A tsunami would surge through most Illawarra beachside suburbs (link
is not the Geoscience map - it was prepared using Google Maps) within
minutes of appearing off the coast. Residents might get just two hours'
warning if it originated near New Zealand. Water would surge forcefully
along roads and waterways, carried to low-lying areas - in some cases
more than a kilometre inland. The scenario has been used as part of
animated hi-tech modelling to predict the impact of a large-scale
disaster in Australia...Illawarra-South Coast State Emergency Service
said it would organise warnings in the region during the approach of a
tsunami and evacuate high-risk areas such as beaches and caravan parks.
Deputy region controller Dianne Gordon said a tsunami education and evacuation plan for Illawarra would be released in November.
- 4 Aug 08 Science Alert: When push comes to shove - Unfortunately
for us, one such zone is a couple of thousand kilometres off the north
east coast of Australia. A large quake there could have the potential
to generate a tsunami similar to the one in the Indian Ocean on Boxing
Day 2004, though this time hitting land on Australia’s eastern
coast. “The interpreted geometry of the subducted plate there is
alarmingly similar to the structure of the slab below Sumatra,”
says Dr Richards. ANU page.
- 30 Jul 08 SMH: Australia and Indonesia to share [tsunami] buoy
- 28 Jun 08 Tsunami Society: PRELIMINARY ANALYSIS OF THE EARTHQUAKE (MW 8.1) AND TSUNAMI OF APRIL 1, 2007, IN THE SOLOMON ISLANDS, SOUTHWESTERN PACIFIC OCEAN (4Mb PDF)
- 21 Jun 08 SMH: Crash and burn - Australia has been lulled into a false sense of security on disaster readiness
- 9 Jun 08 Pacific Magazine: Cook Islands To Get Tsunami Warning Check.
“The Cook Islands participation in the first end-to-end Pacific-wide
tsunami exercise in 2006 (“Pacific Wave”) showed some improvements
could be made in conveying tsunami warnings nationally to local
communities and large organisations such as schools and the public
sector.”!
- 2 Jun 08 AFP: Strong quake strikes off Australia: US agency - no tsunami warning issued
- 29 May 08 ABC: [Aust] Tsunami warning system will 'stop false alarms'
- 9 May 08 NZ Herald: Don't panic but ... think-tank highlights flaws in disaster planning.
- 8 May 08
Australian Strategic Policy Institute: Taking a punch: Building a more resilient Australia
- 8 May 08 Sun Herald Mississippi: SAIC [US company] to Provide Additional Tsunami Buoys to Australia.
- 7 May 08 Herald Sun: Australia unready for big disaster
- "Recent improvements to tsunami monitoring are commendable but don't
help to convey the message of a potential impact to communities in the
middle of the night,". Also in The Age.
- 25 Apr 08 New Scientist: Megaquake set to strike within a decade
- sometime in the next 10 years we can expect an earthquake of a
similar magnitude to the 2004 Sumatra quake that triggered the
devastating Indian Ocean tsunami. Will it be the Tongan Trench?
- 13 Apr 08 SMH: Tide turns on tsunami alert - still no civil preparedness
- 9 Apr 08 AusGEO: Revealing the continental shelf off New South Wales - Bulli slide analysed (thanks Ted Bryant)
- 9 Apr 08 ABC: Asian tsunami a once in a decade event: expert.
- 4 Mar 08 SMH: Researchers cast doubt on mega-tsunami theory (but don't explain the multiple lines of evidence)
- 1 Oct 07 ABC: Scientists examine data from quakes off NZ
- Emergency services on both sides of the Tasman [Sea] were on alert
[to do what?], but [fortunately] neither of the quakes triggered a
tsunami of any significance.
- 30 Sep 07 (6pm) Magnitude 7.4 quake south of New Zealand - low risk of long range tsunami.
- 28 Sep 07 (7am) Magnitude 6.3 earthquake near Vanuatu at 6am Sydney time.
- 5 Aug 07 Catalyst: Tsunami Buoy
- Australia is not as immune from tsunamis as you might
think...Climb aboard as Australia’s first tsunami warning alarm
is dropped into a deep ocean trench...scientists haven’t done our
job properly in communicating and working
with the public. And at present the budget in the Australian Tsunami
Warning System doesn’t match the budget of the physical
infrastructure (i.e. civil preparedness).
- 17 Apr 07 Dr George Pararas-Carayannis: EARTHQUAKE AND TSUNAMI OF 1 APRIL 2007 IN THE SOLOMON ISLANDS.
- 10 Apr 07 Australian: Radar net to sound alarm on tsunamis
- A coastal ocean radar network able to estimate the size of a tsunami
heading towards Australia is being set up in Queensland. (thanks Steve
Ward) [opinion: not sure about the 1 hour warning claim - a deep
water tsunami travels at around 500km/h, even though it will slow down
in the shallower water of the continental shelf one hour to travel
150km seems optimistic]
- 5 Apr 07 ABC: 'Rough guide' tsunami warnings on the way
- scientists cannot be confident their predictions will be very
accurate, because they have not finished modelling how the sea behaves.
(but see Steve Ward's real-time modelling below)

- 5 Apr 07 Steve Ward (tsunami modeller): Real Time Tsunami Forecast 4/1/2007 SOLOMON IS. Quake (several MOV files)
- 4 Apr 07 Email to local paper:
Monday's tsunami alert exposed numerous flaws in the
preparedness for a major tsunami along the east coast of Australia.
Since 1999 I have pointed out the lack of tsunami preparedness in
Australia.
The report today in the Manly Daily is focussed on the dissemination of
warning information but that is relatively straight forward. I
subscribe to the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center's email alert service
and received the first warning at 7.53am:
A TSUNAMI WARNING IS IN EFFECT FOR
SOLOMON IS. / PAPUA NEW GUINEA
FOR ALL OTHER PACIFIC AREAS, THIS MESSAGE IS AN ADVISORY ONLY.
10 minutes later this was upgraded to include Australia:
A TSUNAMI WARNING IS IN EFFECT FOR
SOLOMON IS. / PAPUA NEW GUINEA / VANUATU / NAURU / CHUUK /
NEW CALEDONIA / POHNPEI / KOSRAE / AUSTRALIA / INDONESIA /
TUVALU / KIRIBATI / MARSHALL IS.
...
ESTIMATED INITIAL TSUNAMI WAVE ARRIVAL TIMES. ACTUAL ARRIVAL TIMES
MAY DIFFER AND THE INITIAL WAVE MAY NOT BE THE LARGEST. THE TIME
BETWEEN SUCCESSIVE TSUNAMI WAVES CAN BE FIVE MINUTES TO ONE HOUR.
LOCATION
COORDINATES ARRIVAL TIME
-------------------------------- ------------ ------------
SOLOMON IS.
MUNDA
8.4S 157.2E 2039Z 01 APR
FALAMAE
7.4S 155.6E 2103Z 01 APR
...
AUSTRALIA
CAIRNS
16.7S 145.8E 2349Z 01 APR
BRISBANE
27.2S 153.3E 0033Z 02 APR
SYDNEY
33.9S 151.4E 0114Z 02 APR
GLADSTONE 23.8S
151.4E 0139Z 02 APR
MACKAY
21.1S 149.3E 0144Z 02 APR
HOBART
43.3S 147.6E 0245Z 02 APR
(times are Universal/GMT so 0114Z equates to 11.14am in Sydney)
The big flaw exposed on Monday was the lack civil preparedness:
a) In Australia there are no computer models of shoaling tsunami to
predict the size of a tsunami when it reaches the coast, based on its
direction and deep water amplitude
b) There are no inundation models to predict which areas are at risk
from tsunami of various sizes and no civil disaster plans to deal with
such inundations.
c) There is no way to reliably and quickly warn the thousands of people
in these areas (Sri Lanka now has air-raid style sirens along its
coast).
d) People have not been taught what to do if they receive a tsunami
warning (Pacific Islanders have been shown videos of tsunami to help
them understand what to do. In Japan and Hawaii there are planned
evacuation routes).
In short, some people who should have moved a safety did not and many
people who were in no danger took unnecessary action and added to the
disruption.
A typical misinformed comment of a person on the beach (with a young
family!) was that they would wait until the sea receded before running
to a high place. Firstly, the trough does not always arrive before the
peak of the wave and secondly, as shown in the graphic videos from the
Indian Ocean tsunami, people have no chance of out-running a tsunami.
Tsunami move much faster than a normal ocean wave.
Although there were a few hours warning on Monday this is not always
the case. For example, there are several examples of underwater
landslide tsunami where a huge portion of the continental slope
collapsed, often triggered by a minor earthquake. The continental slope
off the coast of Sydney has not been surveyed for this risk and, in
hindsight, the Newcastle Earthquake of 1989 should have been treated as
a potential tsunami event.
Regards
Michael Paine
- 3 Apr 07 ABC: Tsunami forecasting needed now: Beattie [opinion: yesterday was a "dress rehearsal" - not a "false alarm" - and
it is now evident that a great deal more effort is needed before coast
dwellers are secure. There is an urgent need for inundation mapping so
that civil authorities know which areas to evacuate - once a tsunami is
predicted]
- 2 Apr 07 Update 10.30am : The threat to the East Coast
seems to be easing. A news reports suggest very poor preparedness in
Cairns where the road up to the hills was jammed with traffic at the
same time that tourists stayed on the beachfront unaware of any threat.
- 2 Apr 07 ABC: Aust on alert after tsunami hits Solomons - the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center has expanded its warning
as the quake was bigger than first thought. Approximate arrival times:
Brisbane 10am, Sydney 11am. DO NOT go to the coast to watch - it is
likely to be quite small but all warnings like this should be taken
very seriously.
- 23 Feb 07 New Scientist ($): The wave from nowhere - Shortly
after 5 pm on 18 November 1929, an earthquake shook Canada's eastern
provinces. In Halifax, Nova Scotia, a seismometer needle jumped right
off track. Across the Gulf of St Lawrence, on Newfoundland's Burin
peninsula, the tremors sent people running into the streets. But for
them, worse was to come. Two hours later, 7-metre waves hit the shore,
their momentum carrying them as far as 27 metres above the high-tide
level...
6 Jan 06 Scientific American has a map of
potential tsunami-generating sub-duction zones - the extract at right
shows the ring around the east coast of Australia. See the latest earthquakes here.
-
22 Oct 05 New Scientist: Page 62 of the paper
edition has an ad for "Project Scientists - Australian Tsunami Warning
System".
- 29 Jul 05 Geology News: Tsunami Threat by Undersea Volcanoes - Submerged volcanoes in the South Pacific can erupt at any time, and are
apparently the source of a very dangerous tsunami hazard according to a
new study done
by researchers at Australian National University. “Over the last
six years, research teams from Australia, New Zealand, the USA, and
Germany have mapped a relatively narrow strip of ocean stretching about
2000 kilometres from the north of New Zealand to Tonga, and found 75
previously unknown volcanoes. Only 10 volcanoes were known in the area
prior to this research,” he said. “If any one of these
underwater volcanoes either explosively erupts or collapses in a sudden
movement, it would have a massive impact on the ocean, triggering a
tsunami which could devastate communities across the region. There is
evidence from new high-resolution images of these volcanoes that these
events have happened many times in the past.

-
Jan 05: In 1989 the Newcastle/Sydney region experienced a mild
earthquake and 15 people died when a building collapsed in Newcastle.
Following analysis of the 1998 New Guinea tsunami, it is now apparent
that "mild" earthquakes can set off undersea
landslides on nearby
continental shelves that, in turn, generate deadly localised tsunami.
Maybe once thorough seafloor surveys have been conducted and analysed
for landslide potential then some coastal areas can be declared "safe"
from such short-range tsunami. In the meantime it would be prudent for
people on coastlines
with steep continental slopes (like Sydney) to quickly move to higher
ground if they feel an earthquake, in case such a landslide tsunami is
generated. See 'The Need for Underwater Landslide
Hazards Prediction" -
a report by Phillip Watts on a 2000 workshop in Science of Tsunami Hazards Volume
20 No 2, page 95 (6Mb PDF).
- Jun 08: DID A SUBMARINE SLIDE TRIGGER THE 1918 PUERTO RICO TSUNAMI?
Caption: Underwater survey
showing a landslide
on the continental slope
between Sydney and Wollongong. It is about twice the size of Botany
Bay and the depth is greater than the height of Mt
Not so rare!
Click for larger image. May be reproduced with credit to this page or
Michael Paine.
Comment on the SE Asian tsunami
disaster, 26 Dec 04.
This horrific tsunami was caused
by an
earthquake - not an asteroid - but the consequences are similar.
Like the
asteroid threat, warnings from
experts about the risk and consequences of major tsunami have been
largely ignored, except in Japan and Western USA.
Japan and the USA have a very a
effective
tsunami
warning system in the Pacific Ocean. It is based, partly, on
pressure
sensors on the ocean floor. Tsunami waves are so long that they
change
the pressure at the seafloor whereas wind waves get smoothed out.
It would be possible to set up a similar tsunami warning system in the
Indian Ocean - for a few $million (ie the cost of a few cruise
missiles)!
However some locations, such as Sumartra, were probably too close to
the source of the tsunami for a warning system to be effective and in
other areas communication limitations might hinder evacuation.
Updates related to the Indian Ocean Tsunami (latest at top)