North Carolina Tsunami Risks tsunami is a wave train, or series of waves, generated in a body of water by a sudden disturbance that vertically displaces the water column. Earthquakes, landslides, volcanic eruptions, explosions, and meteorites impacts, can generate tsunamis. It was generally believed until a few years ago that only earthquakes and shockwave-generating disasters such as nuclear blasts and meteorites could generate a tsunami. However, scientists have uncovered a new culprit: underwater landslides. These can be precipitated by underwater topography and vary according to its shape. As deadly as they are, tsunamis have generally been limited to areas of the Pacific Rim that are susceptible to catastrophic seismic activity. Recent discoveries about the nature of the continental shelf off the coast of Cape Hatteras have lead scientists to re-consider their likelihood.
The last major tsunami to hit the United States occurred in 1964 when an earthquake occurred in Prince William Sound in Alaska. The earthquake had a surface-wave magnitude of 8.4, somewhat higher than the San Francisco Earthquake of 8.25 that had leveled many neighborhoods of the city. When the earthquake hit the Aleutian Islands, it took the lives of more than 106 people and caused 84 million in damage. The effects of the earthquake were felt as far away as Hawaii, and took 16 other lives in addition to those in Alaska. Tsunamis ravage coastlines and can be deadlier than hurricanes; whereas a hurricane is identified weeks in advance, a tsunami can strike without warning. Costal residents prepared for the possibility of an earthquake would be caught unawares in the event of a tsunami.
In a paper published in the May 2000 issue of the journal Geology, Neal Driscoll of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution and colleagues Jeffrey Weissel of Columbia University's
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory and John Goff of the University of Texas at Austin, said that recently discovered cracks along...
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