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1 icanes), and geophysical (volcanic activity, tsunamis).
2 ion of central Chile triggered a destructive tsunami.
3 es as large as that of the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami.
4 low slip greatly contributing to the ensuing tsunami.
5 epicenter 7 months before the earthquake and tsunami.
6 , mainly during the first 3 months after the tsunami.
7 ific following the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami.
8 e Fukushima power plant after the March 2011 tsunami.
9 g rupture that contributed to the subsequent tsunami.
10 and Yamada) that were heavily damaged by the tsunami.
11 ced the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake and Tsunami.
12 the Earth several times, leading to a global tsunami.
13 ern for a worst-case scenario distant-source tsunami.
14 o Dickson Fjord, triggering a 200-meter-high tsunami.
15 ant tsunami events including the 2011 Tohoku Tsunami.
16 its capability to visualize ocean tides and tsunami.
17 sunami and the 1960 Great Chilean Earthquake Tsunami.
18 of the 2011 Great East Japan earthquake and tsunami.
19 Prefecture) was directly in the line of the tsunami.
20 lects back towards high latitudes, causing a tsunami.
21 e aftermath of the 2011 Japan Earthquake and Tsunami.
22 of the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake and Tsunami.
23 to the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake and Tsunami.
24 yn-eruptively, then it cannot have generated tsunamis.
25 tant factor in the generation of destructive tsunamis.
26 rvations for early warnings of MCS-generated tsunamis.
27 in the Peruvian subduction zone create large tsunamis.
28 coupling likely contributed to fast-arriving tsunamis.
29 ncluding the impact of giant earthquakes and tsunamis.
30 crustal depths can lead to the generation of tsunamis.
31 failure, potentially leading to destructive tsunamis.
32 tics of meteotsunamis are similar to seismic tsunamis.
33 seismic vibrations and/or the generation of tsunamis.
34 sting a currently neglected source of global tsunamis.
35 s potential source for great earthquakes and tsunamis.
36 onment, most notably leading to catastrophic tsunamis.
37 But do they represent storms or tsunami?
39 uake and quickly followed by the devastating Tsunami, a damageable amount of radionuclides had disper
45 ants, 33 (3.8%) died directly because of the tsunami and an additional 95 people died during the 38-m
46 ption in January 2022 generated catastrophic tsunami and contends for the largest natural explosion i
48 ed with sedimentation by an impact-generated tsunami and in Western Australia is represented by a maj
50 state of understanding of volcanic explosion tsunami and provides a framework for assessment of futur
51 merican Samoa, namely the 2009 South Pacific Tsunami and the 1960 Great Chilean Earthquake Tsunami.
53 s of infections have recently occurred after tsunamis and earthquakes in Indonesia, Kashmir, and Hait
54 to natural variability (such as earthquakes, tsunamis and hurricanes) and climate change (such as flo
56 Such flank failure can result in devastating tsunamis and threaten not only the immediate vicinity, b
57 patterns, storm events and possibly 'normal' tsunamis, and reached their present height by uplift of
59 eing widespread and frequent, these internal tsunamis are at least comparable to winds, and much more
66 y fast travel times and long duration of the tsunami, as well as its global reach, are consistent wit
67 ucation: Residents with a basic knowledge of tsunamis, as well as an understanding of how environment
69 iterion to the proxy toolkit for identifying tsunami backwash deposits, namely the basal soft sedimen
71 nd there is no immediate danger of a similar tsunami being generated on this part of the plate bounda
73 ndian Ocean basin has identified prehistoric tsunamis, but the timing and recurrence intervals of suc
74 rming eruptions of island volcanoes generate tsunamis by the interaction of different eruptive phenom
77 er potential for the reconstruction of paleo-tsunami catalogs and should be preferentially investigat
81 o debris flows, slumps, slides, and possible tsunamis) caused by gas-hydrate dissociation are of imme
83 d rheologies successfully reproduce observed tsunami characteristics from post-event field survey res
86 human and dog skeleton discovered within the tsunami debris are in situ victims related to the Late B
88 rained, short-lived organics from within the tsunami deposit constrain the event to no earlier than 1
93 0 year stratigraphic sequence of prehistoric tsunami deposits from a coastal cave in Aceh, Indonesia.
94 the age of one of the sand sheets below the tsunami deposits of the great Cascadia earthquake in 170
95 covery of three unprecedented well-preserved tsunami deposits related to repeated flank collapses of
100 We prove that the common believe that great tsunamis do not occur on the Mexican Pacific coast canno
102 r a strengthening of the existing Indonesian Tsunami Early Warning System (InaTEWS), especially in Ja
106 Measurements made by the team show that the tsunami elevation and runup ranged from 5 to 12 meters.
108 is iceberg calving, which can generate large tsunamis endangering human beings and coastal infrastruc
109 t existing empirical equations for landslide-tsunamis establish estimates of an upper envelope of the
113 analyses, we show evidence for two enormous tsunami events possibly triggered by bolide impacts, res
114 considered insufficient for triggering large tsunamis, except through the generation of submarine lan
117 disaster provide detailed information about tsunami exposures and self-reported symptoms of post-tra
118 After the 26 December 2004 earthquake and tsunami, field data on the extent of the inundation in B
121 and thus we have the first observations of a tsunami from a large emergent volcanic eruption captured
123 fault of the 2011 Tohoku-Oki earthquake and tsunami from boreholes drilled by the Integrated Ocean D
124 ed to establish whether Swedish survivors of tsunamis from the 2004 Sumatra-Andaman earthquake had in
125 h patient register for the 5 years after the tsunami (from Dec 26, 2004, to Jan 31, 2010) and estimat
126 of the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake and Tsunami (GEJE), we examined the association between chan
127 d at Anak Krakatau on December 22(nd), 2018, tsunamis generated by volcanic flank collapse are incomp
130 th separation and sorting more difficult for tsunami-generated waste as opposed to earthquake-generat
132 marine slope failures are a likely cause for tsunami generation along the East Coast of the United St
133 e earthquakes has important implications for tsunami generation and for the rheological behavior of t
134 22-0.30 km(3), which is used to initialize a tsunami generation and propagation model with two differ
139 me data stream in future warning systems and tsunami genesis estimation observing both, ground motion
141 es can contribute to the generation of large tsunamis (>1 m), under rather generic conditions.
142 However, the source mechanisms behind the tsunami have been disputed due to difficulties in sampli
144 environments in areas repeatedly impacted by tsunamis have a higher potential for the reconstruction
145 nd sediment records of large earthquakes and tsunamis have expanded the temporal data and estimated s
147 evidence suggest that great earthquakes and tsunamis have whipped the Pacific coast of Mexico in the
152 ent properties influence earthquake rupture, tsunami hazard, and prism development at subducting plat
158 ng variations in population vulnerability to tsunami hazards that integrates (i) geospatial approache
159 tury will influence future maximum nearshore tsunami heights (MNTH) at the Ports of Los Angeles and L
160 ning Java rupture simultaneously, shows that tsunami heights can reach ~ 20 m and ~ 12 m on the south
161 ge-scale laboratory experiments that iceberg-tsunami heights from gravity-dominated mechanisms (B and
162 of an upper envelope of the maximum iceberg-tsunami heights, they fail to capture the physics of mos
165 duction earthquakes produce relatively small tsunamis, however historical records and now geologic ev
166 multibeam bathymetric data, reveal possible tsunami impact on Bimini, the Florida Keys, and northern
170 ore the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake and Tsunami in a survey of older community-dwelling adults w
172 eactor in Japan following the earthquake and tsunami in March 2011 were found in resident marine anim
176 females who were living, at the time of the tsunami, in communities directly damaged by the tsunami,
177 nami, in communities directly damaged by the tsunami, in comparison with similar females living in ot
178 11 Great East Japan Earthquake and resulting tsunami, including how unsustainable urban development e
179 ymptoms persistently for two years after the tsunami, indicating that the negative effects of exposur
181 subjected to tsunami neglect the effects of tsunami-induced vertical loads due to internal buoyancy.
183 ogether with the short travel time following tsunami initiation present a major challenge for mitigat
184 berg detachment, which in turn excites local tsunamis, internal gravity waves and transient currents
185 led prehistoric Aleutian earthquakes produce tsunami inundation in Hawai'i with the most severe, 14(t
190 unga Tonga-Hunga Ha'apai volcano and ensuing tsunami is the first global volcano-triggered tsunami re
193 ocean floor overestimate the phase speed of tsunamis, leading to arrival time differences exceeding
196 ally designed for exploring the physics of a tsunami-like flow on a soil bed is used to perform exper
197 uge, we are now able to simulate and measure tsunami-like loading with sufficiently high water pressu
198 rium complex, is a contributing aetiology to tsunami lung and central nervous system infections in ne
199 region, with the concomitant risk of another tsunami, makes the need for a tsunami warning system in
202 his kind of hybrid approach is the so-called tsunami mitigation park, which combines a designed hills
206 real-time tsunami MOST (Method of Splitting Tsunami) model produced by the NOAA Center for Tsunami R
208 To assess the expected inundation hazard, tsunami modeling was conducted based on several scenario
209 y, we present comparisons with the real-time tsunami MOST (Method of Splitting Tsunami) model produce
212 uakes (n = 868) affected most species, while tsunamis (n = 272), and volcanoes (n = 171) affected con
213 For particularly destructive hazards like tsunamis, natural elements like vegetation are often com
214 present the first geologic evidence of great tsunamis near the trench of a subduction zone previously
215 ing the fragility of structures subjected to tsunami neglect the effects of tsunami-induced vertical
216 detailed analysis of seismic, geodetic, and tsunami observations of the aftershock that the event im
218 el physical mechanism, namely, that a "solar tsunami" occurring in the Sun's interior shear-fluid lay
219 The great Sumatra-Andaman earthquake and tsunami of 2004 was a dramatic reminder of the importanc
223 Nuclear Plant, damaged by an earthquake and tsunami on March 11, 2011 released large amounts of (131
224 uclear plants affected by the earthquake and tsunami on March 11, 2011 shows that three variables wer
234 d hazard ratios (HRs), then adjusted for pre-tsunami psychiatric disorders, and, for children, for pa
235 sunami is the first global volcano-triggered tsunami recorded by modern, worldwide dense instrumentat
236 nformation dissemination for earthquakes and tsunamis require a rapid characterisation of the fault p
237 unami) model produced by the NOAA Center for Tsunami Research and we observe variations in TEC that c
238 he Minoan town of Malia (Crete) shows that a tsunami resulting from the Bronze Age Santorini eruption
241 ose an unknown submarine landslide-generated tsunami risk to Southern Hemisphere populations and infr
242 ays all of the physical characteristics of a tsunami runup, the timing (<1 hour postimpact) is instea
243 y record of the backwash from two historical tsunamis sampled in a sheltered bay in American Samoa, n
245 lobes formed in association with the younger tsunami, showing that their emplacement took place follo
247 greatest number from a volcanically-induced tsunami since the catastrophic explosive eruption of Kra
251 rd demonstrates that at least 11 prehistoric tsunamis struck the Aceh coast between 7,400 and 2,900 y
253 ulation-representative longitudinal study of tsunami survivors who were living along the coast of Ace
255 nity to study a major volcanically-generated tsunami that caused widespread loss of life and signific
256 11 East Japan earthquake generated a massive tsunami that launched an extraordinary transoceanic biol
259 7 great earthquake, M 8.6, producing a giant tsunami that poured over the coast flooding 500 km along
260 verely damaged by the earthquake and ensuing tsunami that struck off the northern coast of the island
261 eological site was hit by a series of strong tsunamis that caused damage and erosion, leaving behind
262 orld are threatened by local (or near-field) tsunamis that could inundate low-lying areas in a matter
264 atra-Andaman earthquake in Indonesia and its tsunami, the possibility of a triggered earthquake on th
265 trate that glacier calving triggers internal tsunamis, the breaking of which drives vigorous mixing.
266 tween a single row of hills with an incoming tsunami to identify the mechanisms through which the par
267 k the oldest, highest-magnitude investigated tsunami to the following rapid abandonment of the island
268 some likely originating from the 2011 Tohoku tsunami, to examine the relationship between rafting com
270 on of coastal hazards such as distant-source tsunamis under future relative sea-level rise (RSLR) is
272 isk of another tsunami, makes the need for a tsunami warning system in the Indian Ocean all the more
273 analytical models, to demonstrate that this tsunami was driven by a constantly moving source in whic
276 er, in general, the slip models derived from tsunami wave modeling and seismological data are poorly
277 00-m asteroid, resulting in a train of large tsunami waves and the potential release of substantial q
279 n Washington that are directly threatened by tsunami waves associated with a Cascadia subduction zone
280 tially attributed to the arrival of multiple tsunami waves generated by a major landslide in Strombol
288 ajor natural disaster, the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, we provide causal evidence of its imprint on ha
290 ion patterns of the 26 December 2004 Sumatra tsunami were primarily determined by the orientation and
291 than a more piecemeal process, generating a tsunami which reached nearby coastlines within ~30 minut
292 lian Lombardy region was hit by an "epidemic tsunami" which was, at that point in time, one of the wo
293 e interval between impact and arrival of the tsunami, which on the basis of seismic velocities and hi
294 he water-cavity source whereas the far-field tsunami, which was unusually persistent, can be largely
295 isasters such as hurricanes, oil spills, and tsunamis, which may lead to increased populations of har
296 erous geological phenomena, able to generate tsunamis whose effects can propagate far from the source
298 southwest of the volcano, which generated a tsunami with runups of up to 13 m on the adjacent coasts
299 arable to that of a small wall, at least for tsunamis with amplitudes that are comparable to the hill
301 ere, we present numerical simulations of the tsunami, with state-of the-art numerical models, based o