The Largest Recorded Tsunami Was 50 Years Ago 323
An anonymous reader writes "July marks the 50th anniversary of the world's largest tsunami — a 1,720-foot-tall wave in Lituya Bay, Alaska. It was triggered by a chain reaction of events that began with a magnitude 7.7 earthquake on the Fairweather Fault, which dislodged a rock fall of 40 million cubic yards, that fell 3,000 feet and splashed into the northwest end of Lituya Bay to generate the wave. This article includes survivor accounts, maps, a satellite image, and photos taken right after the event." To be fair, eyewitness accounts put the height of the wave as it came toward their boats at perhaps 100 feet. The tsunami scoured the land of vegetation and soil to a height of 1,720 feet above sea level, however.
Feet and yards? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Feet and yards? (Score:5, Insightful)
In all seriousness, this happened in the US, so I'd say it's only fitting that the units of measure are ones that Americans use.
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In all seriousness, this happened in the US, so I'd say it's only fitting that the units of measure are ones that Americans use.
I agree. Because if this would have happened in france, it'd be only fitting that these news were in french.
Only reason to use american measurements would be if this would be aimed directly for americans. If so, why post it on international site (I think that the majority of people browsing this site aren't americans. Are there any public statistics?)
Then again, I don't know who is this aimed to. Why is this on "News for nerds" site as it isn't really news or for nerds... So I don't personally care which me
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
There is nothing inherently superior about the metric system. Why does dividing by 10 matter so much, anyway? Because you have 10 fingers? Really, we should be trying to move to a system of measure that is base 2.
Base ten (Score:5, Insightful)
There is nothing inherently superior about the metric system.
Sure there is. Ease of unit conversion and ease of communication with the REST OF THE FREAKING WORLD. We live in a global economy - we should start acting like it.
Why does dividing by 10 matter so much, anyway? Because you have 10 fingers?
Because we use a base 10 [wikipedia.org] counting system for most calculations. Having a measurement system that is highly compatible with the numeral system most humans use makes sense.
Really, we should be trying to move to a system of measure that is base 2.
Really? Go ahead and tell your mother you came 1011 miles to see her - I'm sure she'll be impressed.
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Why does dividing by 10 matter so much, anyway? Because you have 10 fingers?
Because we use a base 10 [wikipedia.org] counting system for most calculations. Having a measurement system that is highly compatible with the numeral system most humans use makes sense.
Really, we should be trying to move to a system of measure that is base 2.
Really? Go ahead and tell your mother you came 1011 miles to see her - I'm sure she'll be impressed.
I'd prefer that we used a hexadecimal system. It is large enough for brevity but also can readily be converted to binary for simplicity. The only advantage a base-10 system has over hexadecimal is that most people have 10_(10) fingers so they know how to count to 10_(10). If they were smart, they'd know how to count to 0x3FF (1023_(10)).
The Mom Test (Score:3, Insightful)
I'd prefer that we used a hexadecimal system.
And how do you propose we convince every non computer geek in the world that this is a good idea? Further are you going to pay for the math classes virtually everyone will need?
Your idea fails the mom test miserably...
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I am comfortable in both systems, and as necessary I will calculate conversions between them. Why the big fuss over 50 year old data?
Stop being a cry-baby.
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I am comfortable in both systems,
So you are just like most of the people reading this, myself included? Good for you.
and as necessary I will calculate conversions between them. Why the big fuss over 50 year old data?
You didn't hear me making a fuss over it. I did however reply to someone whining about how metric has no advantages which is 95% of the worlds population seems to disagree with.
Stop being a cry-baby.
We're all really impressed with your unit conversion prowess. I bet you pick up all the girls by showing off how you know metric AND imperial units.
Metric bah (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Metric bah (Score:5, Informative)
1 liter is a volume of 10cm x 10cm x 10cm.
Our language is base ten (Score:5, Insightful)
"Grandma, I walked eleven miles to see you."
The funny thing about non base-10 number systems is that our language can't say them without spelling them out. The old joke about "There are 10 kinds of people in the world..." isn't very funny if you say it aloud or in your head: "There are two kinds of people in the world" or "There are one zero kinds of people in the world".
So I believe it's our language, not our fingers, that makes base ten feel natural. If we had grown up accustomed to counting "one two three ten eleven twelve thirteen twenty twenty-one twenty-two twenty-three thirty" then base four would feel natural. The characters "2506" would look as strange as hexadecimal and be as impossible to pronounce without spelling or conversion.
By the way, isn't the term "base 10" devoid of meaning? If our system were base four, then "base 10" would mean "base four" since the characters "10" in base four mean "4" in base ten. Whatever base you use, "10" is your way of writing the value of that base.
Back to the tsunami, it's disappointing to hear that the water was 290 fathoms high only very near it's source (the landslide). That's like saying "Your mama's so fat she jumped in the Pacific and made a tsunami a billion nanometers high."
Re:Our language is base ten (Score:4, Informative)
I believe that we developed a decimal number system because of our fingers. And when the number system developed so did our language. Our adult brains are tuned to decimal numbers because that is the language and system we were educated with. I don't believe that the brains of children are specially tuned to accept a decimal system.
In modern life we don't often use our fingers for manipulating large numbers. In fact our technology works more naturally in binary or hexadecimal. The only thing keeping us using decimal is our language and history, not our fingers.
So the magical thing about SI is not its use of base ten, but rather its use of a consistent base regardless of unit. The cumbersome thing about Imperial units is that the base changes when measuring different things: 12 inches to the foot, 3 feet to the yard, 1760 yards to the mile, 16 ounces to the pound, 4 quarts to the gallon. It's hard to remember which base applies to each unit and it's hard to constantly switch among bases when doing calculations.
Re:Our language is base ten (Score:4, Insightful)
Shopkeeper: XLIV.
Roman Citizen: Why don't you just SAY XLIV? Who can remember 44?
Patch the remaining holes (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm not installing a new system until time and angle measurments get upgraded to base 10.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Sure there is. Ease of unit conversion and ease of communication with the REST OF THE FREAKING WORLD. We live in a global economy - we should start acting like it.
Ease of conversion? Are you kidding? It's no easier to convert in either system, unless you only can do math in your head at the moment. Then the metric system has the advantage. If you have some sort of calculator (y'know, most of the time), it's dead easy either way.
Ease of communication doesn't cut it, either. By your logic, we should all be using the same language, and cursing out those heathens who refuse to abandon the language that they're used to. Yet we're not... we accept that people do things in
Re:Base ten (Score:5, Insightful)
we should all be using the same language, and cursing out those heathens who refuse to abandon the language that they're used to. Yet we're not...
Genau meine Rede. Wir sollten einfach alle weiter unsere eigenen Einheiten verwenden und unsere eigene Sprache sprechen. Es macht nämlich zu viel Arbeit, das alles neu zu lernen, nur um mit anderen Menschen kommunizieren zu können und um willkürliche Umrechnungsfaktoren unnötig zu machen. Solche Anstrengungen sind wirklich zu viel verlangt, und bisher hat auch niemand diese Mühen auf sich genommen. Das ist leicht daran erkennbar, in wie vielen verschiedenen Sprachen alleine in diesem Forum Kommentare geschrieben werden. Wer Sarkasmus findet, darf ihn behalten.
Re:Base ten (Score:4, Insightful)
Ease of conversion? Are you kidding?
Not a bit.
It's no easier to convert in either system...
If you want to believe that dividing by some arbitrary conversion factor is easier than moving a decimal you just go right ahead believing your delusions. By your own arguments it's the same difficulty with a calculator and metric is easier without one. QED metric is easier overall. You should be disappearing in a poof of logic right now.
Ease of communication doesn't cut it, either.
Riiiiiight. [wordpress.com] Because unit conversion mistakes never occur and it's MUCH easier to do unit conversions than to just use the same measurement system everywhere.
Even ignoring social issues There is a measurable economic cost to using multiple measurement systems. It adds unneeded complexity to business, engineering and scientific endeavors especially those that cross international boundaries.
By your logic, we should all be using the same language...
I don't recall ever saying that and I would have said that if that is what I meant. However, English has become the de-facto language of international commerce and scientific discourse if you want to get picky about it. No need to "curse the heathens" since 95% of the world seems to realize that a common measurement system is a useful thing.
Besides imperial units these days are defined against metric units. An inch is explicitly defined as 2.54 centimeters [wikipedia.org]. So you're using metric whether you realize it or not. Why not just cut out the complication and use the real thing?
Re:Base ten (Score:4, Insightful)
when I don't have a calculator on hand, which is extremely rarely.
What do you sleep with one under your pillow or something? I'm sure you'll be doing lots of unit conversions using a calculator while driving at highway speeds.
I didn't say you said it. I said your logic...
Since you proved you couldn't follow your own logic I'll just keep presuming you can't follow mine. I'm well aware of what follows from the logic of my statements. And for the record, yes having a single language would be very helpful in a lot of ways - and tragic in others. But that is an irrelevant strawman since we are talking about numbers and measurements, not language. 95% of the worlds population already uses metric. If there were no advantage in it they would not have done it.
I somehow doubt you'll find many French people speaking primarily English in their normal lives.
You've never been to France have you? Plenty of folks in France speak English quite fluently and since 89% of schoolchildren [wikipedia.org] in the EU learn English as a second language it's not hard for them to find folks to practice on.
There isn't any significant complication, that's what you're missing.
I'm not missing a thing. There only isn't a complication if you never leave or communicate with no one outside the US. Travel abroad someday and see if anyone shares your naive opinions.
There would be real complication if you try to cram the metric system down people's throats, as you try to force an entire nation of people to use units different from the ones they naturally think in.
So explain to me how 5.7 billion people outside the US managed to utilize metric daily and the 300 million here find it too difficult? Nobody is forcing the US to change and no one could anyway. But that doesn't mean that switching to metric isn't a good idea. Heck it's already been tried once - albeit in . [wikipedia.org]
The advantages afforded by metric are extremely small, and the disadvantages in a conversion would be huge. Why, exactly, would any sane person want to convert?
You have that exactly backwards. The initial conversion costs while significant are trivial compared to the long term savings.
Global Economy (Score:2)
You are right.
I know. Thank you.
Since the global economy is already using a common language and common currency, it makes perfect sense to use common units.
By that you of course mean the most important reserve currency [wikipedia.org] and the world languages [wikipedia.org]. Nice to know you support my assertion.
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you MUST use the US Dollar and MUST know ALL the following language...
Must? No. Just like you don't HAVE to use metric. It just makes things easier and more standard.
Actually you can do pretty darn well with just dollars and English. I know because I've done it myself all over the world. English is the primary language of commerce these days and is also the primary language used for scientific discourse. A lot of commodities (notably oil) are denominated in units of dollars regardless of country of origin.
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are you going to be the one to pay for all of the gas pumps to switch over from gallons to liters
Along with all the other taxpayers? Of course I am. I'll be happy to do it too.
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12 being evenly divisible by 2,3, and 4 is
quite convenient in some domains, particulary
construction.
As is 10 being divisible by 2 and 5. What's your point? Somehow 95% of the worlds population seems to build buildings just fine using the metric system. Yes there are some corner cases where non-metric units are advantageous but these are rare and industries which need them are in not prohibited from using a different measurement system when appropriate.
Re:Feet and yards? (Score:5, Insightful)
"There is nothing inherently superior about the metric system."
Of course there is. It uses powers of ten, which is easy math, it's trivial to relate volume-mass-distance measures (1cm^3=1mL water=1g, 1m^3 of water = 1000kg = 1 tonne), it doesn't have half a dozen wacky variations on the same damn unit (it was 5 ounces: would that be the International avoirdupois ounce, the International troy ounce, the Apothocaries' ounce, the Dutch metric ounce, the Maria Theresa ounce, or, wait, is it possible you mean one of the 3 variations of fluid ounces?). It's the same messy story for "pounds", "gallons", and so on. If you're lucky there are only 2 common versions.
I mean, yes, you're right, it's just a matter of convention and units are always interconvertable, but to say there isn't anything inherently superior about the metric system is nuts. What's convenient about remembering that miles have 5280 feet? Oh, wait, just to be clear I meant an international mile, not the U.S. survey mile (5280 survey feet) or international nautical mile (about 6076 feet). (AAAAAUGH!)
Have you ever noticed that virtually ALL Imperial units are now defined in terms of the metric system? An inch isn't an inch anymore, it's 2.54 centimetres exactly. There's a reason for that -- because the metric system isn't built on a shifting sand of dozens of different archaic national standards and conventions for their usage.
The only thing better about the Imperial system is a metric buttload of inertia in people's brains and the convenience of powers-of-two fractions for some measures. But you can use powers-of-two fractions to express things in metric too if you want.
If you like the Imperial systems please stick with one of them, but you'll never convince me that the metric system is merely on par, especially for anything scientific.
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Yeah this debate is getting quite boring, especially since it keeps appearing on slashdot.
If people here can't do rough conversions in their heads (it's not as if we need such high precision in most of such stories) at least a _slashdotter_ should be able to use google to do it.
Here you go:
http://www.google.com/search?num=100&hl=en&safe=off&q=40+million+cubic+yards+in+cubic+meters&meta= [google.com]
http://www.google.com/search?num=100&hl=en&safe=off&q=1720+feet+in+meters [google.com]
People complain about
Re:Feet and yards? (Score:5, Informative)
5,280 feet.
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1 and 3/22 miles.
I don't exactly know where we're going with this.
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
OK smartass:
Without using a calculator, 21467 seconds are how many feet?
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Well fuck. American units can't convert a measurement of time to a measurement of length. I guess you win.
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OK smartass:
Without using a calculator, 21467 seconds are how many feet?
t*s=d
s ft/sec, where s is the speed of the item being measured.
Fill in your own speed you snarky git.
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"it", of course, being c.
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"Without using a calculator, 6000 feet are how many miles?"
Would that be international miles, U.S. survey miles, or international nautical miles?
I don't know. AAAAAUUUUGH! (Falls into Gorge of Eternal Peril)
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Without another unit of measurement, I'd have to say a kilometer is approximately 1 kilometer.
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
In metric time?
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So it's about lowering the bar so anyone can do it without any effort?
I guess this puts some things into perspective.
Re:Feet and yards? (Score:4, Insightful)
Actually the point is that 36430 meters are exactly 36.43 kilometers. The conversion never involves calculations which negatively affect the precision in base ten. If people in the US used a base 2, 12 or 60 number system and a matching unit system, it would make sense, but the imperial unit system is neither advantageous in a different number system nor consistent within itself. It's a relic from an era when measurements didn't have to be exact and estimates were more important than calculations.
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
xor ax,dx
sub ax,dx
You insensitive clod!
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Re:Feet and yards? (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm an American and I would so much rather see everything in Metric. I think the main reason this is in the old, crappy system is not because it's written 'for us' or whatever, but because of the year it happened. Though I would think that the guys collecting the data would use metric anyway...
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From the FAQ:
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Last Modified: 10/3/04
Those stats might not be up to date...
Re:Feet and yards? (Score:4, Informative)
according to alexa (ok, not the most reliable source) about 60% of the traffic is US.
http://www.alexa.com/data/details/traffic_details/slashdot.org [alexa.com]
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With people using VPN gateways in the US, it is next to impossible to tell exactly where *all* people are located.
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very true, but on large numbers like ./'s audience it works quite well. You'll be off by a few %age points at the most.
After all, for those that work from the US but appear through a VPN gateway to be working in Europe there will also be a number of people in the opposite situation.
US-centric to me indicates something of a substantial (say > 50%) of the audience from the US and I think that ./ would fit that handsomely.
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I thought this is the internet.
100 feet = 30.48 m
1720 feet = 524.26 m
3000 feet = 914.4 m
4e10 yards**3 = 3.658e10 m**3
7.7 on the Richter scale = 355e9 ton TNT = 1.484e18 J
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Re:Feet and yards? (Score:5, Interesting)
I used to work in a factory that was owned by a German company, but located in the US. If I would give a drawing labeled in milimeters to our machinists they would balk at it, and I would have to go back and convert it to inches. We had a visiting machinist from Germany and I accidentally gave him a drawing in milimeters to use with our mill which was in inches. Realizing my mistake I offered to correct the drawing. He simply asked what the conversion was. I told him 25.4 mm/in and he came back a little while later with a perfectly machined part.
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Re:Feet and yards? (Score:5, Informative)
I blame women. No woman wants to go from weighing 95 units to weighing 209 units.
Great theory, but there are 2.2lbs in a kilo, not 2.2kg in a lb.
So a 95lb woman weighs about 43kg, not 209kg.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
It's the new marketing campaign for Viagra.
"Go from 5 inches to 12.7 centimeters over night!"
Re: (Score:2)
Congratulations, you did the conversion backwards. A kilogram is 2.2 pounds, not the other way around. A woman who weighs 95 pounds weighs 43 kilograms, not 209.
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Except that you wouldn't want to multiply a pound by 2.2. You'd want to *divide* a pound by 2.2, or, going the other way, multiply a kilogram by 2.2.
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Except that you wouldn't want to multiply a pound by 2.2. You'd want to *divide* a pound by 2.2...
That's an imperial kg, a US kg you multiply. Maybe that's why the US never switched to the metric system.
end sarcasm
Scald much? (Score:2)
60 Hot bath
If you can get in a 60C/140F bath you are either one tough or one scalded individual [tap-water-burn.com].
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: Google Calculator is your friend (Score:2, Informative)
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I mean you only have to google the words measure & yard once in your entire existence, but nope, either you get it your way or you bitch.
FFS, if you don't know by now that 1 metre is approximately 1 yard or 3 feet, then you don't get out much. And if that is too inaccurate for your purposes
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Surely the size of the wave should be measured by the VOLUME of the water displaced, rather than the height.
This one was confined in a bay at its source, so it was very high, but I'll bet the Boxing day 2004 tsunami involved a lot more water, whether you measure it in litres or hogsheads.
Re:Feet and yards? (Score:5, Informative)
from TFA
"The force of the wave removed all trees and vegetation from elevations as high as 1720 feet (524 meters) above sea level. This is the highest wave that has ever been known."
Re: (Score:2)
This is the highest wave that has ever been known."
Known in recorded history, perhaps. We've 'known' of vastly larger waves though. A 20-mile-long lava shelf broke off the southwest side of the Big Island of Hawaii some 40,000 years ago and created a Tsunami hundreds of feet tall that washed over the entire island of Lanai whose highest point is over 3,300 feet. And then, of course, there have been meteorite impacts that have created tsunamis that have washed over whole continents...
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Canary Islands (Score:3, Informative)
The eye witness account... (Score:4, Insightful)
states they where on 5 fathoms = 30 feet of water, the wave was 100 feet high (I'm guessing the guy means 100 feet above normal level) so that makes the wave 130 feet (40 m.) That is one fudging big wave, but its far from 1725 feet (525m.) high - its far more likely that the 130 feet of wave being pressed up the small valley will have so much force it will keep climbing up to that level.
Re: (Score:2)
I was thinking the same thing. Perhaps a more accurate statement would be that this is the highest elevation ever observed on a damage path known to have resulted from a wave?
From a strict wave height standpoint it would be interesting to try and deduce wave heights for some of the largest recorded meteorite impacts at least partially in water - i.e. impacts that would generate a wave near the impact zone. I'm guessing those would be even more impressive than a mountain side falling off.
Re:The eye witness account... (Score:5, Informative)
If you look at the map of the damage, the 1725 figure comes from the slope directly opposite where the honking huge chunk of rock fell 3000' feet to land in the water - which probably displaced all the water straight up and over the spur where the 1725 figure was recorded and then damage along the rest of the bay was more in line with the 100' figure.
Re:The eye witness account... (Score:4, Insightful)
a 100' wave in 30' of water does not become a 130' wave in 0' of water. This would be equivalent to saying that a 1' wave in 1000' of water becomes a 1001' wave at landfall.
What happens is that as the water becomes more shallow, the leading edge of the wave slows down, while the deeper water at the back of the wave continues to move quickly. As a result, the wave compresses horizontally, and grows vertically.
This is similar to what you're saying about the 130' feet of wave being pushed up the valley -- but it's important to note that the wave "being pushed up the valley" to 1725' is the same thing as saying the wave was 1725' high.
It was a 1720 foot wave. (Score:2, Informative)
I think, after reading the article a bit They get that 1720 foot wave from the location directly across the water from the rock slide that stripped vegetation to an elevation of 1720 feet.
"The spur of land between Gilbert Inlet and Lituya Bay that received the full force of the wave. Trees and soil were stripped away to an elevation of 1720 feet above the surface of Lituya Bay. Photo by D.J. Miller, United States Geological Survey."
You even get a picture.
Similar tsnumai will devastate Eastern Seaboard (Score:4, Informative)
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Somebody really should be making that movie.
Current day photos? (Score:5, Insightful)
The photos from the following day are impressive, but I'd like to compare it to what it looks like today: How much has been able to regrow in relatively cold climate in 50 years?
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Well, see for yourself [google.com]. :) :)
Seriously, I've seen a TV program on the 'disaster' and from the ground the you can see where there is an band of young trees around shores of the the bay and older trees further up the slope, but that's about the only visual evidence remaining.
50 years ?! (Score:2)
I mean it was during the cold war and people back then didn't have access to much information as we do now...
Splash? (Score:2, Insightful)
At what point do we call something a wave instead of a really friggin huge splash?
Nothing to do with the Tsunami! (Score:2)
This comment is nothing to do with the Tsunami, but then neither are most of the others, so I'll risk going Offtopic. /. is US-centric and as it is American I guess that's fair enough, but as some 40% of /.ers are not, I think a bit of international understanding is called for to stop all this bickering. We all like the same thing (/.) after all.
Firstly, (I'm a Brit by the way)
Secondly, re measurement, the article, based largely on contemporaneous accounts, used Imperial measures, not metric, so learn to li
But... (Score:3, Funny)
Where's the satellite picture of the scene before the earthquake?
bad reporting ? (Score:2, Insightful)
This whole thing sounds like hogwash to me. Not the facts, but the reporting. First, they take the splash damage size as the wave height, even though one sentence later it's acknowledged that wasn't the case. And two, this isn't a Tsunami at all. It's a huge wave, certainly, but it's not a Tsunami. Among other things, you don't notice Tsunamis as huge waves on a boat - that's where the whole name comes from ("big wave at the harbour") - because japanese fishermen came home from the sea, hadn't noticed anyth
Questionable height question? (Score:3, Interesting)
OK, when I saw the 1700 ft figure I suspected something was wrong. AFIK, it would take an unbelievable amount of energy to support a mountain of water that high. (Where's frink when I need it?) Even 100 ft indicates a huge amount of energy. It makes total sense if that amount of energy meeting the solidly-planted continental uprising would be re-directed in the direction of least resistance (in this case upslope) until it is dissipated.
The questions that come to mind are things like: How fast was it traveling? Over what area from the epicenter did it travel? What was the actual water level above ground as it rushed upslope? If I ws on the 5th story of a hotel in the water's path, would I have been able to safely watch? Would the hotel have be able to survive the shock if were made out of concrete? (or sticks? or straw?) How much salt was left behind? (The '64 earthquake dropped the level of Cook Inlet by about 40 feet in some places. [That would be 12.192 meters for those of you who are English-unit challenged.] This caused massive salt-water infusion that killed off vegetation for miles inland on parts of the Kenai Peninsula.) How would I model something like that?
It wasn't a tsunami (Score:3, Interesting)
I've been to Lituya Bay. I've walked its shores. I managed to lose a crab pot there. I've talked with one of the survivors. Lituya Bay is a protected harbor used by fishing boats to get out of the weather. I used the harbor to protect myself and a 38' fishing boat from 105 mph winds one summer (1967). There is a very narrow passage to get into the harbor. You have to line up to lights (night) or white sticks (day) and traverse between a large sandspit and the shore. In the middle of the bay is an island. It contains ruins of an old French fur trapping venture. At the back of the bay is a glacier. When the earthquake struck a piece of the glacier broke off and entered the bay, quickly, causing a huge wave. The wave rushed away from the back of the bay, washed over the island, and washed several fishing boats over the sandspit into the Gulf of Alaska, snapping their anchor chains easily.
You can see that this was no ordinary 'tsunami.' The wave did not come from the sea, but from the shore and moved outward. take a look on Google Earth and you will see what I mean. 58*37'52" North, 137*36'03" East.
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Look at the map in the link. The 1720 elevation was recorded directly across from the area where the rockslide occurred. It would seem to me that right in that vacinity the water went up MUCH higher than 100 feet, but that one neaby area took the brunt of it, and the wave that continued on out was much smaller. You can see on the map how it quickly diminishes in size (and then slowly continues shrinking) the further away from the source you get.
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i will have to say one thing.. i never would have through about the wave coming from inshore - also that one rock face took most of the direct energy.. imagine if it hadn't been there..
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Stupid ethnocentric bastard. On another culture's website, expect to hear that culture's units of measurement.
US-based website == US units of measurement.
I don't complain when I have to convert from metrics to imperial.
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I don't complain when I have to convert from metrics to imperial.
That's because Metric Starfleet sounds quite lame.
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cool. What device do you use to measure out exactly 33.3333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333 cm?
Re:Units (Score:5, Funny)
This is kdawson we're talking about. We should be thankful he gave us any sort of units at all.
Units and SigFigs (Score:2)
1720 ft has at least 3 and at most 4 significant digits. So your converted number should be 524 m or 524.3 m. Converting to 524.25 m is incorrect, as it implies more accuracy than the original number does.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
said the guy that wasted the first post spot with 'frosty piss'... class act indeed. Pot, kettle, black.
Re: (Score:2)
touchy touchy...
Also, I didn't realize how much work has apparently already been done to facilitate just that and that they are actually planning a joint conference.
http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=613205&cid=24182575 [slashdot.org]
Re: (Score:2)
100 ft wave?!
No, a 1,720 ft wave!
Re: (Score:2)
Re:"To be fair" ot "To be correct"? (Score:5, Insightful)
A tsunami may be only a few feet higher than average sea level as it crosses oceans, but when the mass of water piles up as it reaches shore, the runup can go hundreds of feet above sea level. If you're standing on the slope at a height of 800 feet above sea level, and the tsunami starts, which is more 'real' about the height of the tsunami -- the hundred-foot height of the wave in the open water of the bay, or that the runup is going to scour the ground clean almost a thousand feet farther up the slope than where you're standing?
Re:50 years ago? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:We all know what really caused this... (Score:4, Informative)