Topic: Record 24m (80ft.) Tsunami Strikes Japan  (Read 1088 times)

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Offline J. Carney

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Record 24m (80ft.) Tsunami Strikes Japan
« on: October 23, 2004, 07:59:44 pm »
Looks like Florida ain't the only place getting clobbered lately! :o

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=1540&ncid=1540&e=2&u=/afp/20041023/sc_afp/japan_weather_typhoon_041023130641


Typhoon Tokage produces record eight-story wave in Japan

Sat Oct 23, 9:06 AM ET
   
    Science - AFP

TOKYO (AFP) - Typhoon Tokage produced the biggest wave ever recorded in Japan as its rampaged across the country this week, claiming nearly 80 lives, the government said.

The 24-meter-high (80-foot) wave, the size of an eight-story building, was monitored off the port of Muroto on the southern island of Shikoku on Wednesday, the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport said.

It was the highest wave recorded in the country since the ministry started monitoring wave heights in 1970.

The previous record was 20 meters in a wave monitored off Miyazaki on the southern island of Kyushu when another typhoon roared by in August.
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Offline Sirgod

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Re: Record 24m (80ft.) Tsunami Strikes Japan
« Reply #1 on: October 23, 2004, 08:04:26 pm »
For those Visiting Japan this week, Don't forget to Bring a Towel.

Stephen
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Offline jualdeaux

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Re: Record 24m (80ft.) Tsunami Strikes Japan
« Reply #2 on: October 24, 2004, 11:19:44 am »
I thought that one should always take a towel whenthey are traveling, especially if they are going to hitchhike.
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Offline J. Carney

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Re: Record 24m (80ft.) Tsunami Strikes Japan
« Reply #3 on: October 24, 2004, 12:02:50 pm »
I thought that one should always take a towel whenthey are traveling, especially if they are going to hitchhike.

Now there's a hoopy frood that 'knows where is towel is'!
Everything I did in my life that was worthwhile I caught hell for. - Earl Warron

The advantages of living in the Heart of Dixie- low cost of living, peace and quiet and a conservative majority. For some reason I think that the first two items have a lot to do with the presence of the last one.

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Offline S'Raek

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Re: Record 24m (80ft.) Tsunami Strikes Japan
« Reply #4 on: October 25, 2004, 02:26:45 am »
You know, as cool as an 80ft wave sounds it is really something that I hope never to see in my life.  I've spent less time on ships than other people I know, but I have been fortunate in that I've never experienced anything like this or a rouge wave. 

And I always take a towel when I travel.  Or at least I end up regretting it if I don't.  :D

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Offline Fedman NCC-3758

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Re: Record 24m (80ft.) Tsunami Strikes Japan
« Reply #5 on: October 25, 2004, 09:33:04 pm »
Saw this program on television awhile back ....... really makes you think what might occur.

Scientist warns of Atlantic tidal wave
Calls for monitoring of key Canary Island volcanoBy Jeremy Lovell

Updated: 5:44 p.m. ET Aug. 9, 2004LONDON - The bad news is tens of millions of people along the eastern seaboard of the United States and Canada may drown if the slow slippage of a volcano off north Africa becomes a cataclysmic collapse.
 
But the good news is the world is not likely to be destroyed by an asteroid any time soon.

Scientist Bill McGuire told a news conference on natural disasters on Monday that sometime in the next few thousand years the western flank of the Cumbre Vieja volcano on the Canary Island of La Palma will collapse, sending walls of water 100 meters high racing across the Atlantic.

A chunk of the volcano the size of a small island began to slide into the ocean in 1949. There is almost no monitoring of the volcano, giving virtually no chance of any advance warning of another eruption, which could trigger the catastrophe.

"The U.S. government must be aware of the threat. I am sure they are not taking it seriously," McGuire of the Benfield Grieg Hazard Research Centre told reporters. "They certainly should be worried, as should the island states of the Caribbean."

He said the giant tidal wave or tsunami triggered by such a collapse would hit the other islands of the Spanish-owned Canaries within an hour and reach the north African coast within two hours.

Between seven and 10 hours later, waves still several tens of meters tall and traveling at the speed of a jet plane would be swamping the Caribbean and crashing into the eastern seaboards of South and North America.

McGuire urged the governments of Spain and the United States to fund monitoring of the volcanically active La Palma ? a project he said could be achieved relatively cheaply.

He said the slow collapse ? started by an eruption in 1949 ? would almost certainly be turned catastrophic by another eruption of the volcano, which erupts every 25 to 200 years.

The last eruption was in 1971, and prior to 1949, the previous eruption was in 1712.

"A future president of the United States must make a call on what to do when La Palma collapses," he said.

On a brighter note, scientist Benny Peiser of John Moores University in Liverpool told the same news conference that the threat of a cataclysmic strike on the earth by a large asteroid was fading rapidly as money was pumped into finding them.

Within 10 to 30 years, all the near-earth asteroids will have been charted. Scientists believe they can find a way to steer an asteroid out of the way of the earth, as long as they have enough warning it is coming.

That leaves the field clear for Hollywood to move on to volcanic eruptions and tsunami for the next generation of apocalyptic movies.
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