
NWS/West Coast and Alaska Tsunami
Warning Center
Tsunami Characteristics
Last
updated: 7/2005
What is a tsunami?
- A tsunami is a series of waves with a long
wavelength and period (time between crests) generated by a large,
impulsive displacement of sea water.
- Time between crests of the wave can vary from a
few minutes to over an hour.
- Tsunamis are often incorrectly called tidal
waves; they have no relation to the daily ocean tides.
How are
tsunamis generated?
- Tsunamis are generated by any large, impulsive
displacement of the sea level.
- Tsunamis are also triggered by landslides into
or under the water surface, and can be generated by volcanic activity and
meteorite impacts.
How often do tsunamis
occur?
- On the average, two tsunamis occur per year
throughout the world which inflict damage near the
source.
- Approximately every 15 years a destructive, ocean-wide
tsunami occurs.
Can strike-slip
(horizontal motion) earthquakes trigger tsunamis?
- Yes, approximately 15% of all damaging tsunamis
were triggered by strike-slip earthquakes.
- This type of earthquake is less likely to trigger
a tsunami than one with vertical motion.
- The waves are likely generated by associated
landslides or motion of a sloping bathymetric feature.
- Tsunamis generated by strike-slip earthquakes
normally affect regions near the source only.
What does the word
“tsunami” mean?
- Tsunami (soo-NAH-mee)
is a Japanese word meaning harbor wave.
How fast do tsunamis
travel?
- Tsunami velocity depends on the depth of water
through which it travels (velocity equals the square root of the product
of the water depth times the acceleration of gravity).
- Tsunamis travel approximately 475 mph in 15,000
feet of water. In 100 feet of water the velocity drops to about 40 mph.
- A tsunami travels from the central Aleutian Is.
to Hawaii in about 5 hours and to California in about 6 hours,
or from the Portugal
coast to North Carolina
in about 8.5 hours.
How big is a tsunami?
- Tsunamis range in size from inches to over a
hundred feet.
- In deep water (greater than 600 feet), tsunamis
are rarely over 3 feet and will not be noticed by ships due to their long
period (time between crests).
- As tsunamis propagate into shallow water, the
wave height can increase by over 10 times.
- Tsunami heights vary greatly along a coast. The waves can be amplified by shoreline
and bathymetric (sea floor) features.
- A large tsunami can flood low-lying coastal land
over a mile from the coast.
What does a tsunami look
like when it reaches shore?
- Normally, a tsunami appears as a rapidly
advancing or receding tide.
- It some cases a bore (wall of water) or series
of breaking waves may form.
How is a tsunami
different from a wind-generated wave?
- Wind-generated waves usually have periods (time
between crests) between 5 and 20 seconds.
Tsunami periods normally range from 5 to 60 minutes.
- Wind-generated waves break as they shoal and
lose energy offshore. Tsunamis act
more like a flooding wave. A twenty
foot tsunami is a twenty foot rise in sea level.