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Red Cross
Emergency Preparedness
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Tsunami
Education & Awareness
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Why
Talk About Tsunamis
Twenty-four tsunamis have caused damage in the
United States
and its territories during the last 204 years. Just since 1946, six
tsunamis have killed more than 350 people and caused a half billion
dollars of property damage in Hawaii, Alaska,
and the West Coast.
As a tsunami nears the coastline, it may rise to several feet or, in
rare cases, tens of feet, and can cause great loss of life and property
damage when it comes ashore. Tsunamis can travel upstream in coastal
estuaries and rivers, with damaging waves extending farther inland than
the immediate coast.
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A tsunami can occur during any season of the year and at any time, day or night.
What
Are Tsunamis, and What Causes Them?
Tsunamis are ocean waves produced by earthquakes or underwater landslides. The
word is Japanese and means "harbor wave," because of the devastating
effects these waves have had on low-lying Japanese coastal communities.
Tsunamis are often incorrectly referred to as tidal waves, but a tsunami is
actually a series of waves that can travel at speeds averaging 450 (and up to
600) miles per hour in the open ocean.
In the open ocean, tsunamis would not be felt by ships because the wavelength
would be hundreds of miles long, with an amplitude of only a few feet. This
would also make them unnoticeable from the air. As the waves approach the coast,
their speed decreases and their amplitude increases.
Unusual wave heights have been known to be over 100 feet high. However, waves
that are 10 to 20 feet high can be very destructive and cause many deaths or
injuries.
Tsunamis are most often generated by earthquake-induced movement of the ocean
floor. Landslides, volcanic eruptions, and even meteorites can also generate a
tsunami. If a major earthquake is felt, a tsunami could reach the beach in a few
minutes, even before a warning is issued. Areas at greatest risk are less than
25 feet above sea level and within one mile of the shoreline.
Most deaths caused by a tsunami are because of drowning. Associated risks
include flooding, contamination of drinking water, fires from ruptured tanks or
gas lines, and the loss of vital community infrastructure (police, fire, and
medical facilities).
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From
an initial tsunami generating source area, waves travel outward in all
directions much like the ripples caused by throwing a rock into a pond. As these
waves
approach
coastal areas, the time between successive wave crests varies from
5
to 90 minutes.
The first wave is usually not the largest in the series of waves, nor is it the
most significant. Furthermore, one coastal community may experience no damaging
waves while another, not that far away, may experience destructive deadly waves.
Depending on a number of factors, some low-lying areas could experience severe
inland inundation of water and debris of more than 1,000 feet.
Learn whether tsunamis have occurred in your area by contacting your local
emergency management office, National Weather Service office, or the American
Red Cross Mount Rainier Chapter. If you are in a tsunami risk area, learn how to
protect yourself, your family, and your property.
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Awareness
Information
The
West Coast/Alaska Tsunami Warning Center (WC/ATWC)
is responsible for tsunami warnings for
California,
Oregon, Washington, British
Columbia,
and Alaska.
The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center (PTWC) is responsible for providing warnings
to international authorities,
Hawaii,
and U.S.
territories within the Pacific basin. The two Tsunami Warning Centers coordinate
the information being disseminated.
All tsunamis are potentially dangerous, even though they may not damage every
coastline they strike. Damaging tsunamis are very rare. Our coastlines are
vulnerable, but tsunamis are infrequent. Understand the hazard and learn how to
protect yourself, but don't let the threat of tsunamis ruin your enjoyment of
the beach.
The WC/ATWC and PTWC may issue the following bulletins:
WARNING:
A tsunami was or may have been generated, which could cause damage; therefore,
people in the warned area are strongly advised to evacuate. Indicates that a
tsunami is imminent and that coastal locations in the warned area should prepare
for flooding. A bulletin, initially based only on seismic information without
tsunami confirmation, issued as a means of providing the earliest possible alert
to at-risk populations. Warnings initially place a restricted area in a
condition that requires all coastal areas in the region to be prepared for
imminent flooding. Subsequent bulletins are issued at least hourly or as
conditions warrant to continue, expand, or end the warning. In the event a
tsunami has been confirmed which could cause damage outside the source region,
the warning will be extended as appropriate.
WATCH:
A tsunami was or may have been generated, but is at least two hours travel time
to the area in watch status. Local officials should prepare for possible
evacuation if their area is upgraded to a warning. An alert issued to areas
outside the warned area. A bulletin, usually based only on seismic information
with tsunami confirmation, issued as a means of alerting the population within 1
to 3 hours tsunami travel time beyond the tsunami warning area of an earthquake
with the potential to have generated a tsunami that may affect the watch area.
Subsequent bulletins are issued at least hourly or as conditions warrant to
expand the watch area, upgrade it to a warning, or cancel the watch and warning.
A Tsunami Watch is normally included in the text of the message that
disseminates a Tsunami Warning.
ADVISORY:
An earthquake has occurred in the Pacific basin, which might generate a tsunami.
WC/ATWC and PTWC will issue hourly bulletins advising of the situation. A
message issued when the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center has issued a warning for
an event outside of the WC/ATWC Area of Responsibility (AOR) which poses no imminent threat to the
AOR. A
bulletin issued to areas not currently in either warning or watch status when a
tsunami warning has been issued for another region of an ocean. An Advisory
indicates that an area is either outside the current warning and watch regions,
or that the tsunami poses no danger to the area. The WC/ATWC will continue to
monitor the event, issuing updates at least hourly. As conditions warrant, the
Advisory will either be continued, upgraded to a watch or warning, or ended.
INFORMATION BULLETIN:
Information bulletins are issued for earthquakes which are not likely to trigger
a tsunami dangerous to the Area of Responsibility (AOR). A bulletin issued to advise participants of the
occurrence of an earthquake with the evaluation that a potentially destructive
tsunami was not generated, or that an earthquake has occurred outside the TWC's
AOR and could potentially generate a tsunami. If the evaluation indicates the
possible generation of a destructive or nondestructive tsunami, an investigation
will be initiated and additional tsunami information bulletins will be issued as
warranted until the investigation is concluded.
INFORMATION
MESSAGE:
A message with information about an earthquake that is not expected to generate
a tsunami. Usually only one bulletin is issued. Information messages issued when
smaller earthquakes (less than the warning threshold) may be felt near the
coastal areas. These messages are issued to assure coastal residents and
emergency managers that there is no tsunami danger.
Be familiar with the tsunami warning signs. A strong earthquake lasting 20
seconds or more near the coast may generate a tsunami. A noticeable rapid rise
or fall in coastal waters is also a sign that a tsunami is approaching.
Tsunamis most frequently come onshore as a rapidly rising turbulent surge of
water choked with debris. They are not V-shaped or rolling waves, and are not
"surfable."
Tsunamis may be locally generated or from a distant source. In 1992, the Cape
Mendocino, California, earthquake produced a tsunami that reached Eureka in
about 20 minutes, and Crescent City in 50 minutes. Although this tsunami had a
wave height of about one foot and was not destructive, it illustrates how
quickly a wave can arrive at nearby coastal communities and how long the danger
can last.
In 1957, a distant-source tsunami generated by an earthquake in the
Aleutian
Islands
in
Alaska
struck Hawaii,
2,100 miles away. Hawaii
experienced $5 million in damages from that tsunami.
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For more information or questions about staying safe in and
around water, please contact the
American Red Cross Mount Rainier Chapter
Serving Pierce, Thurston, Mason and Lewis Counties
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(253) 474-0400 Pierce County
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(360) 352-8575 Thurston & Mason
Counties
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(360) 748-4607 Lewis County
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