Deadly Tsunami Reached
Around the Globe
August 26, 2005 — By Randolph E. Schmid, Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Last year's Sumatra
tsunami focused its death and destruction on the lands around the Indian
Ocean, but the great wave traveled around the world and was recorded as
far away as Peru and northeastern Canada.
The wave rose a massive 30 feet as it destroyed communities around the
Indian Ocean.
Tide gauges worldwide recorded its arrival from hours to a day after its
Dec. 26 start, and movement of the wave was also tracked by satellite,
according to a study appearing Thursday in Science Express, the online
edition of the journal Science.
A research team led by Vasily Titov of the Pacific Marine Environmental
Laboratory in Seattle reported that the wave moved in a complex pattern
as it circled the globe, guided by ocean floor ridges that helped focus
its energy in particular places.
The wave traveled several times around the globe before it finally
dissipated, Titov reported.
Wave heights recorded at Callao, Peru, 11,400 miles east of the
epicenter of the quake that caused the wave, and at Halifax, Nova
Scotia, 14,400 miles west, were higher than at the Cocos Islands,
located just over 1,000 miles south of the quake, the team noted.
The unusually high waves so far from the quake site result from two
factors, the main east-west direction of the wave's energy and the
focusing mechanism of the deep-sea ridges, Titov's team reported.
The first tsunami wave arriving at the Cocos Islands peaked at about 12
inches, the team said. By contrast, waves arriving at Callao and Halifax
topped 20 inches, the team reported.
Other communities where tide gauges recorded arrival of the tsunami
included Kodiak, Alaska, 10.4 inches; Point Reyes, Calif., 15.6 inches;
Corral, Chile, 7.6 inches; Port Stanley, Falkland Islands, 17.8 inches;
Newlyn, England, 2 inches and Brest, France, 3.2 inches.
Tsunami wave heights along the East Coast of the United States are less
exact because a storm passing along the coast also induced oscillations
in the water. Tsunami height estimates included 9 inches at Atlantic
City, N.J., 14 inches at Trident Pier, N.J. and 3 inches at Magueyes
Island, Puerto Rico.
Source: Associated Press |