Thursday, January 24, 2013

Tsunami


Background
Tsunamis are among the most terrifying natural hazards known to man and have been responsible for tremendous loss of life and property throughout history. Because of their destructiveness, tsunamis have notable impact on the human, social and economic sectors of our societies. In the Pacific Ocean, where the majority of these waves have been generated, the historical record shows wide scale destruction. In Japan, which has one of the most populated coastal regions in the world and a long history of earthquake activity, tsunami has destroyed large coastal populations. There is also a history of tsunami destruction in Alaska, in the Hawaiian Islands in South America, Japan and elsewhere in the Pacific.


The most notable tsunami in the region of the Indian Ocean was that associated with the violent explosion of the volcanic island of Krakatoa in August 1883. A 30 m (100 feet) tsunami resulting from this explosion killed 36,500 people in Java and Sumatra.


Earthquake of 26th December 2004:
On 26th December 2004, the Indian coastline experienced the most devastating tsunami in recorded history. The tsunami was triggered by an earthquake of magnitude Mw 9.3 at 3.316°N, 95.854°E off the coast of Sumatra in the Indonesian Archipelago at 06:29 hrs making it the most powerful in the world in the last 40
years.
The earthquake of 26th December 2004 occurred off northwest of Sumatra is not an unusual earthquake from the Plate Tectonics point of view. It has occurred in the vicinity of seismically active zone, close to Sunda Trench in the water depths of about 1300 m. The earthquake hypocenter is located relatively at shallow depth, about 30 km below the ocean floor. The high magnitude, Mw 9.3 of the earthquake and its shallow epicenter have triggered tsunami in the northeast Indian Ocean. These were travelled in open ocean of the Bay of Bengal and subsequently transformed into a train of catastrophic oscillations on the sea surface close to coastal zones of Sri Lanka, east and west coasts of India.