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Angel
12-30-04, 01:48 PM
Scientists: Tsunami Could Hit West Coast



AP Photo NY115

By JOSEPH B. VERRENGIA

Associated Press Writer

Tsunami scientists and public safety officials are closely watching an earthquake-prone nation with thousands of miles of crowded coastlines for signs of an imminent disaster. Indonesia? Japan? Try the United States.


Experts say the West Coast could experience a calamity similar to the one they have been watching unfold half a world away.


``People need to know it could happen,'' said geologist Brian Atwater of the U.S. Geological Survey.


Scientists say grinding geologic circumstances similar to those in Sumatra also exist just off the Pacific Northwest coast. They are a loaded gun that could trigger a tsunami that could hit Northern California, Washington, Oregon and British Columbia in minutes - too fast for the nation's deep-sea tsunami warning system to help.


In fact, Atwater said there was a 9.0 earthquake under the Pacific more than 300 years ago that had devastating consequences. He and other scientists last year reported finding evidence of severe flooding in the Puget Sound area in 1700, including trees that stopped growing after ``taking a bath in rising tide waters.''


The danger rests just 50 miles off the West Coast in a 680-mile undersea fault known as the Cascadia subduction zone that behaves much like one that ruptured off Sumatra. The 1700 quake occurred along the Cascadia fault.


Scientists say a giant rupture along the fault would cause the sea floor to bounce 20 feet or more, setting off powerful ocean waves relatively close to shore. The first waves could hit coastal communities in 30 minutes or less, according to computer models.


Seattle; Vancouver, British Columbia; and other big cities in the region probably would be relatively protected from deadly flooding because of their inland locations. But other, smaller communities could be devastated.


And while buildings in the United States are far more solid than the shacks and huts that were obliterated in some of Asia's poor villages, few structures could withstand nearby tremors as powerful as those that occurred Sunday in Sumatra.


Moreover, such a quake would be way too close to shore for the nation's network of deep-sea wave gauges to be of any help.


Even in the case of quakes happening farther out in the Pacific or in Alaska, the U.S. warning system might not be adequate.


The network - which consists of six deep-sea instruments in Alaska, Washington, Oregon and Hawaii and near the equator off the coast of Peru - is thin and scattered, and at least two of the gauges in Alaska are not even reporting daily wave readings. Also, predicting where a tsunami is likely to come ashore cannot be done with the kind of precision seen in hurricane forecasts.


Eddie N. Bernard, who directs the network for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, said the six sensors are the ``bare minimum'' for adequate warning. He said there are plans to expand the system to 20 sensors in the next five years, including 10 gauges for the seismically active Aleutian Islands.


Whether the continental United States is vulnerable to tsunamis from Asian earthquakes is another question. Hawaii and parts of Alaska certainly are exposed, but whether earthquake fault lines in Japan and Southeast Asia are oriented in the right directions to send tsunamis all they way to the Lower 48 states is debatable.


As for the Atlantic Coast, a tsunami is considered extremely unlikely.


Some computer models suggest East Coast cities are vulnerable to a large tsunami if there were a huge volcanic eruption and landslide in the Canary Islands, off northwest Africa. But other researchers say such an event would happen only once in 10,000 years, and such a disruption is unlikely to occur all at once.



12/29/04 20:54


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After listening to people talk and watch the news about the Tsunami that had hit South Asia, I was shocked at the devastation and the lost that these countries had to face... and since I was born in Thailand.. it made a difference to the whole picture.. Although I don't remember much of Thailand because I basically grew up in the United States.. My thoughts and prayers goes out to the families and friends of the victims of the tsunami... However, this news about a similiar disaster that might hit the US scares me.. and I Hope that we will never have to experience this..

Namvet67
12-30-04, 02:16 PM
Well Angel..I guess it could happen and I know this is hitting closer to home to you since you were born in Thailand. I had lunch at a Thai restaurant yesterday and a server there (also born in Thailand) expressed the same concerns as yours. I know Thailand well..been to Bankok twice..beautiful country. I wouldn't spend a lot of time getting worried about the same thing happening here...Nothing you can do about it..worry only about those things you can control. I live in tornado alley but I don't stay up at night worrying about it. My prayers also go out to the families and friends of the victims of the tsunami.

jinelson
12-30-04, 03:03 PM
I remember when the earthquake in Alaska in 1961 or 62 generated a tsunami and it traveled all the way down to California. I was just a kid but I remember going to Sausalito which is across the SF bay from where I live and seeing all the boats and houseboats in piles on the land. But now we have the tsunami warning system statewide because of that.

Amanda
12-30-04, 05:01 PM
I have heared that Marines have been taken from Japan for humanitarian aid, and now the Marine Corps is spread thin. Is this so?..

And yes i have heared on the news that a Tsunami could hit the U.S. guess we will just have to wait and see for sure. I was here in Washington for the "big" earthquake. I can not remember the magnitude, but this one that recently hit was much larger. I can't imagine what it must have been like. The people in those countries will stay in my prayers.

drillinstructor
12-30-04, 05:12 PM
We will send prayers out for those people. Going to make my recruits use their 5 mins of pray time hehe

Amanda
12-30-04, 09:14 PM
haha! : )

killer1on1
12-30-04, 10:14 PM
my prayers go out to the lives that have been taken...thats ashame! im stationed here in okinawa and everybody is heading out to go help....it is thin!!! they were wondering if they will have nightmares coming back home....all i have to say about that is its totally different seeing that kind of dead people rather than being in war and watching fellow Marines die! so i told them they will bealright but i can only imagine!!! it would be weird but not weird!

Angel
12-30-04, 11:31 PM
Originally posted by drillinstructor
We will send prayers out for those people. Going to make my recruits use their 5 mins of pray time hehe


Lol! hehe you're the best DI..

Seeley
01-02-05, 11:14 AM
I remember the only time we actually got "prayer time." That was when the SDI was there or an officer happened to walk in during BDR haha. Let me tell you all though. If you want to see something moving,watch a bunch of Marine Corps recruits go to church on the Depot. Let them play "I Can Only Imagine" and watch them sing and blubber like little babies. During recruit training, I got closer to God than I ever thought I would.