A wave or
series of waves that occur in an ocean or other large body of water and that are caused by
some activity that displaces large amounts of water, such as seaquakes, landslides,
large meteorite impacts or volcanic
eruptions under the ocean. They can move hundreds of miles per hour out and away from
their point of origin. Near seacoasts, tsunamis may become very large and cause great
destruction, but in the deep open sea they cannot be detected by the eye. Tsunami is the
Japanese word for "harbor wave," and are sometimes known as
tidal waves. Some
tsunamis may reach heights of 100 feet or more.
The eruption of Krakatoa in 1883 formed waves that inundated whole districts in Java and
Sumatra. Lisbon, Portugal (1755), and Hilo, Hawaii (1946), suffered disastrous floods from
tidal waves caused by earthquakes.
Wrote the historian Ammianus
Marcellinus of the catastrophe that befell Alexandria in 365 AD:
"On that fateful morning in July,
the people of Alexandria were struck by horrible phenomena, such as are related to us
neither in fable nor in truthful history.
For a little after daybreak, preceded by heavy
and repeated thunder and lightning, the whole of the firm and solid earth was shaken and
trembled."
As the quake itself subsided, the
waters of the Mediterranean began pulling away ominously from the coasts, "so that in
the abyss of the deep thus revealed men saw many kinds of sea-creatures stuck fast in the
slime; and vast mountains and deep valleys, which Nature, the creator, had hidden in the
unplumbed depths... first saw the beams of the sun." Many people, thinking that the
worst might be over, ventured into the suddenly shallow waters to gather stranded fish
with their bare hands. But the worst was by no means over. The rapid drop in water level
was soon followed by a tremendous wave that came crashing down on the city with all its
terrifying power and fury. Ammianus described the scene in these words:
"The roaring sea, resenting, as it
were, this forced retreat, rose in its turn...
dashed mightily upon islands and broad
stretches of the mainland, and leveled innumerable buildings.... The great mass of waters,
returning when it was least expected, killed many thousands of men by drowning."
The unwise fishermen were no doubt
among the drowned. So great was the force of the water that it lifted large ships and
deposited them on the tops of buildings or carried them as far as two miles inland. Later,
when the waters had receded, many ships "were found to have been destroyed, and the
lifeless bodies of shipwrecked persons lay floating on their backs or on their
faces." In all, some 50,000 Alexandrians are thought to have perished in the
earthquake and ensuing inundation.
In an age when extraordinary
events
were routinely attributed to God's will and disasters were viewed as divine punishment for
man's sin, the earthquake caused
astonishment and fear throughout the decaying Roman
Empire. People apprehensively recalled previous calamities and spoke of this one as only a
preview of worse things to come. But Alexandria itself and its remarkably sturdy
lighthouse endured, and for generations afterward its citizens commemorated the
earthquake and flood of 365 with a yearly festival. On each anniversary of the disaster,
according to the fifth-century lawyer and historian Sozomen, Alexandrians would make
"a general illumination throughout the city," offer "thankful prayers to
God," and celebrate "very brilliantly and piously" their city's
survival."
Major Historical
Tsunamis
Date
Place
Description
Estimated
Deaths
1645 BC
Crete
Generated by
the volcanic eruption of the ancient Greek island of Santorini
Unknown
July
21, AD 365
Alexandria
Generated
by earthquake
50.000
+
June
7, 1692
Port
Royal, Jamaica
Generated
by earthquake
Thousands
January 26,
1700
Pacific
Northwest and Japan
Generated by
the Cascadia Earthquake (estimated 9.0 magnitude)
Unknown
1703
Japan
Generated
by earthquake
100,000
1707
Japan
Generated
by earthquake
30,000
1737
Cape
Lopatka, Kamchatka Peninsula, Russia
210
ft (64 m) high wave generated by earthquake
Unknown
November
1, 1755
Lisbon,
Portugal
Waves
20-50 ft (6-15 m) high generated by earthquake
10,000-60,000
1782
South China
Sea
Generated by
earthquake
40,000
1792
Island of
Kyushu, Japan
Generated by
the collapse of of one of Mount Unzen's several lava domes
15,030
February
20, 1835
Talcahuano,
Chile
Generated
by earthquake in Concepcion
Unknown
August
8, 1868
Arica,
Chile
50
ft (15 m) wave generated by earthquake
25,000+
August
27, 1883
Krakatoa,
Indonesia
Generated
by eruption of volcano
36,000
June
15, 1896
Honshu,
Japan
100
ft (30 m) wave generated by earthquake; destroyed 175 mile (280 km) coastline
27,122
September
8, 1900
Galveston,
Texas
Tidal
wave generated by hurricane
9,000
December
28, 1908
Messina
in Sicily and Italian coastal cities
Earthquake
and 26 ft (8.5 m) wave
120,000
September
1, 1923
Sagami
Bay, Kanto Plain, Atami and Nebukawa, Japan
Earthquake,
fire, mudslide and 36 ft (11 m) wave
145,000
November
18, 1929
Grand
Banks, Newfoundland
Triggered
by a sub-marine landslide and earthquake
29
March
3, 1933
Sanriku,
Japan
Generated
by earthquake
2,990
April
1, 1946
Hilo,
Hawaii and Aleutian Islands, Alaska
Generated
by earthquake on Unimak Island, Alaska, creating waves up to 112 ft (35
m) high
150-190
November
4, 1952
Kamchatka
Peninsula, Russia
Triggered
by earthquake
Six
cows died in Hawaii, no human lives were lost
June
23, 1955
Near Patani,
Thailand
Tidal
wave caused by bad weather
500
March
9, 1957
Aleutian
Islands, Alaska. Also Hawaii
Triggered
by earthquake south of the Andreanof Islands
Thanks
to a timely alarm from the International Pacific Tsunami Warning Center at Honolulu, no
human lives were lost
July
9, 1958
Lituya
Bay, Alaska
Earthquake
caused huge slab of ice and rock to fall off nearby glacier into bay; giant splash formed
tsunami
3
May 22,
1960
Chile
Generated
by a series of earthquakes
450-2,290
May 22,
1960
Hilo,
Hawaii
Generated
by a series of earthquakes (same as Chile on the same date)
61
March
28, 1964
Prince
William Sound, Alaska
An
earthquake and subsequent landslides generated a series of tsunamis, the highest reaching
close to 100 ft (31.7 m)
130
November
13, 1970
East
Pakistan
Monster
waves generated by cyclone
500,000
- 800,000
November
29, 1974
Bangladesh,
off Cox's Bazaar
12
ft (3.7 m) waves generated by cyclone
20
November
29, 1975
Island
of Hawaii
Earthquake
off the coast of the Island of Hawaii generated waves between 5ft and 45 ft (1.5 m and
14.3 m) high
2
January
19, 1976
Ganges Delta,
Bangladesh
Tidal
wave caused by bad weather
800
fishermen
August
17, 1976
Mindanao,
Philippines
Generated
by earthquake
8,000
July
18, 1979
Lomblem Island,
Indonesia
6
ft (1.83 m) wave generated by volcano collapse
539
October
16, 1979
Nice,
France
Undersea
landslides generated 2 tsunamis one week apart
23
1983
Western Japan
Generated
by earthquake
104
September
1, 1992
Nicaragua
Earthquake
caused series of waves 35 ft (11 m) high
170
December
12, 1992
Flores
Island & Babi Island
Series
of tsunamis, generated by earthquake. Waves ranging from 18 ft to 80 ft (5 m to 25 m)
high, depending where they hit.
1690
(Flores)
263 (Babi)
July
12, 1993
Island of Okushiri,
Japan
Underwater
earthquake generated waves 16 ft to 100 ft (5 to 31.7 m) high
200
+
June
3, 1994
Eastern
Java, Indonesia
Earthquakes
caused series of waves more than 200 ft (60 m) high
223
November
11, 1994
Mindoro
Island
Generated
by earthquake. Waves 22 ft (7 m) high
70
May
17, 1995
South East Bangladesh
Tidal
wave generated by vicious storm
100
October
9, 1995
Jalisco,
Mexico
Generated
by earthquake. Waves 35 ft (11 m) high
1
January
1, 1996
Minahassa
Peninsula, area of Sulawesi
Generated
by earthquake. Waves 12 ft (4 m) high
24
February
17, 1996
Biak,
Irian Java
Generated
by earthquake. Waves ranging from 15 ft to 30 ft (4.5 to 9 m) high
161
February
21, 1996
North
Coast of Peru
Generated
by earthquake. Waves 16.5 ft (5 m) high
12
November
17, 1996
Near Brownsville, Texas
10
ft (3 m) high wave caused by bad weather
10
July 17, 1998
Papua
- New Guinea
Generated
by earthquake. Waves ranging from 22 ft to 47 ft (7 m to 15 m) high
3,000
September 15, 1999
Fatu Hiva, Marquesas Islands
Generated
by landslide. Two waves 16.5 ft (5 m) high
Property
damage, no human lives were lost
December 26,
2004
India,
Indonesia (Sumatra and Java), Malaysia, Maldives, Myanmar, Sri Lanka and Thailand