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         Tsunamis Geology:     more books (45)
  1. Tsunamis: Their Science and Engineering (Advances in Earth and Planetary Sciences)
  2. Tsunami Research at the End of a Critical Decade (Advances in Natural and Technological Hazards Research)
  3. Near-field tsunami waveforms from submarine slumps and slides (Report) by Mihailo D Trifunac, 2001
  4. Report by Mihailo D Trifunac, 2001
  5. Developing Tsunami-Resilient Communities: The National Tsunami Hazard Mitigation Program
  6. Furious Earth: The Science and Nature of Earthquakes, Volcanoes, and Tsunamis by Ellen J. Prager, 1999-11-22
  7. Perspectives on Tsunami Hazard Reduction: Observations, Theory and Planning (Advances in Natural and Technological Hazards Research)
  8. The Storegga Slide tsunami-comparing field observations with numerical simulations [An article from: Marine and Petroleum Geology] by S. Bondevik, F. Lovholt, et all
  9. Tsunamis in the World (Advances in Natural and Technological Hazards Research)
  10. Earthquakes, Volcanoes, and Tsunamis: Resources for Environmental Literacy
  11. Surficial geology of the Juneau Urban Area and vicinity, Alaska: With emphasis on earthquake and other geological hazards (Open-file report / U.S. Geological Survey) by Robert D Miller, 1972
  12. Crescent City's destructive horror of 1964 (Oregon geology) by Peggy Coons, 1995
  13. Relative sea level changes, tsunamis and severe shaking recorded in the Sixes River Marsh and Estuary, south coastal Oregon, during the last 6,000 years by H. M Kelsey, 1996
  14. Explanation of mapping methods and use of the tsunami hazard maps of the Oregon coast (Open-file report) by George R Priest, 1995

1. Tsunamis
impacts. Killer Waves From your About geology Guide, an introductionto tsunamis and why it s OK to call them tidal waves. . British
http://geology.about.com/cs/tsunamis/
zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') About Homework Help Geology Tsunamis Home Essentials Content Index A to Z The Image Gallery ... Plate Tectonics in a Nutshell zau(256,152,180,'gob','http://z.about.com/5/ad/go.htm?gs='+gs,''); Maps Rocks and Sediments Geology and Culture Geophysics ... Help zau(256,138,125,'el','http://z.about.com/0/ip/417/0.htm','');w(xb+xb);
Stay Current
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Tsunamis
Sea waves caused by quakes, volcanoes, landslides and impacts.
Alphabetical
Recent Up a category Killer Waves From your About Geology Guide, an introduction to tsunamis and why it's OK to call them "tidal waves." British Columbia Tsunami Warning Plan All about this province's part in the Pacific tsunami warning system. Find the PDF on this page of hazard plans. Cascadia Tsunami Studies The U.S. Geological Survey is doing important groundwork in the Pacific Northwest. The Disaster Center This site has a tsunami page that includes a useful bulletin board. "Impact of Tsunamis on Oregon Coastal Communities" A fine presentation by the Center for Coastal and Land-Margin Research not just for Oregonians.
more from your guide Local Tsunamis in the Pacific Northwest Meteorology Tsunami Messages Newfoundland Tsunami of 1929 The great waves that followed the offshore earthquake of 18 November 1929 killed dozens of people in Canada's worst tsunami disaster. The lostatsea.ca site reproduces many historical documents from this forgotten event.

2. Coastal And Marine Geology Program - U.S. Geological Survey
The US Geological Survey s Coastal and Marine geology Program studies coastal hazards(including erosion, hurricane impacts, and tsunamis), and environmental
http://marine.usgs.gov/
Search CMGP
Coastal and Marine Geology Program
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how to use this Any Bathymetry Beaches Climate Corals Currents Earthquakes Ecosystems El Niño Environmental Change Erosion Floods GIS Global Warming Groundwater Landslides Mapping Meteor Impacts Minerals Monitoring Pollution Remote Sensing Sea-Level Change Sediments Sonar Mapping Tsunamis Volcanoes Wetlands Any Alaska California (Cent/S) Caribbean East Coast Florida Platform Great Lakes Gulf of Mexico (W/Cent) Hawaii International Pacific Northwest U.S. Inland Any Research Projects Educational Materials Photographs Movies Maps Publications Data Sets About the
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Help Find Lost Oceanographic Instruments News and Events in Sound Waves This Month: Sound Waves - a Monthly Newsletter of Coastal Science and Research News from Across the USGS May issue posted 05/27/2004 In Sound Waves this month - Hawai'i: Coastal landforms and historical shoreline change.

3. TSUNAMI FIELD SURVEY MOVIES
Top/Science/Earth_Sciences/geology/Geologic_Hazards/Tsunami/Multimedia
http://cwis.usc.edu/dept/tsunamis/movies/
TSUNAMI FIELD SURVEY MOVIES AND SIMULATIONS
Some Video Footage of post-event damage:
NEW! Southern California simulation of a Tsunami(17.1 MB)
Babi Island during the 1992 Flores event (567K in MPEG format)
Java, (868K in MPEG format)
More Java, (884K in MPEG format)
Peru (1.61M in MPEG format)
Puerto Rico Simulations (in MPEG format)
A computer simulation of the 1993 Hokkaido-Nansei-Oki event at Okushiri, Japan.
  • Okushiri (NOTE: these movies are in MPEG format, clicking the hypertext will download the movie into your computer. You will need a viewer to watch them. If you do not have a viewer, one can be downloaded from the net. Last updated 06 September 1997 The Tsunami Home Page University of Southern California
  • 4. Atlantic Tsunamis More Common Than You Think
    Search. geology Atlantic tsunamis more common than you think. geology Blog. « World sGreatest GeoPoem Main To the emailer who asked about a reprint ».
    http://geology.about.com/b/a/070877.htm
    zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') About Homework Help Geology Home ... Plate Tectonics in a Nutshell zau(256,152,180,'gob','http://z.about.com/5/ad/go.htm?gs='+gs,''); Maps Rocks and Sediments Geology and Culture Geophysics ... Help zau(256,138,125,'el','http://z.about.com/0/ip/417/0.htm','');w(xb+xb);
    Stay Current
    Subscribe to the About Geology newsletter. Search Geology
    Atlantic tsunamis more common than you think
    Geology Blog Main
    March 08, 2004
    Atlantic tsunamis more common than you think
    Tsunamis, we're taught, are a hallmark of the Pacific Ring of Fire, where great earthquakes trigger huge sea waves . But Harry Woodworth of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has been documenting historic "tidal waves" on the US east coast and has a theory that hurricanes and other large storms trigger subsea landslides. These in turn raise tsunamis where people don't expect or recognize them. His voluminous site has recently been updated. Go there to learn more about the dreaded "raz de maree." It's a highlight of the Tsunamis list
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    Most Popular Geology Image Gallery - Geologic Features and Processes About Geology Image Gallery - The Rock Wing Global Seismic Hazard Map Index Zen Rock Garden ... Geology Content, A to Z

    5. Intro To Tsunamis
    Coastal marshes buried by tsunami sands are clear evidence that tsunamis have struckthe Oregon coast many of geology Mineral Industries 800 NE Oregon St.
    http://www.oregongeology.com/earthquakes/Coastal/TsunamiIntro.htm
    Geologic Hazards on the Oregon Coast
    An introduction to tsunamis
    Also:

    The past occurrence of seismic sea waves in the Pacific Northwest has come to light with recent research that matches records from Japan with carbon-isotope-14 data from wood buried in tsunami sands on the West Coast. Because the Japanese data are so accurate, exact dates can be given for sea wave occurrences. The date of the last large tsunami, recorded in the sands and correlated with Japanese records, was January 26, 1700. The earthquake that generated the wave registered M 9, and the ensuing tsunami destroyed coastal villages in Japan.
    In Oregon, prehistoric runups (i.e., how high a tsunami wave reaches above mean sea level) can be deduced with numerical methods. From such models, it was concluded that a tsunami that struck Salishan Spit in Lincoln County between 300 and 800 years ago had a runup of up to 40 feet above sea level. It is likely that the same wave probably overtopped a 16-foot-high barrier ridge at Cannon Beach and breached a 20-foot ridge at Seaside.
    One of the largest subduction zone earthquakes ever recorded was the M 9.2 quake on March 27, 1964, centered in Prince William Sound, Alaska. This generated a tsunami that struck the Oregon coast at 11:30 p.m. with waves as high as 10 feet, swamping houses, destroying bridges and sea walls, and tragically killing four children. A family was camping at Beverly Beach and sleeping in a small driftwood shelter at the time. The second wave reached them, throwing the mother out onto the beach and the father up against a cliff, while the children were washed out to sea. In March 1999, a plaque remembering the children and providing information about tsunamis was dedicated at Beverly Beach State Park.

    6. USATODAY.com - Resources: Earthquakes And Tsunamis
    04/26/2002 Updated 1049 AM ET. Resources Earthquakes and tsunamis. tsunamisare large ocean waves caused by undersea earthquakes or landslides.
    http://www.usatoday.com/news/science/geology/understanding-earthquakes.htm
    Home News Main Categories Top News Nation States Washington/Politics ... Offbeat More News Columnists Lotteries City Guides Government Guide ...
    Click here to get the Daily Briefing in your inbox
    04/26/2002 - Updated 10:49 AM ET Resources: Earthquakes and tsunamis Earthquakes are one of the most feared natural disasters because scientists have found no way to predict them. Tsunamis are large ocean waves caused by undersea earthquakes or landslides. They are often called "tidal waves" even though they have nothing to do with the tides. The links below to USATODAY.com graphics and text and to other Web sites are a guide to the science of earthquakes and tsunamis. USATODAY.com information Graphics Wonderquest answers Stories from USATODAY.com

    7. Tsunamis ~ Tidal Waves ~ Flooding
    don t know and it s very difficult to predict when and where these tsunamis are goingto occur. . Their research, published in the journal geology, started with
    http://www.crystalinks.com/tsunami.html
    Tsunamis ~ Tidal Waves ~ Flooding
    Tsunami comes from the Japanese tsu (harbor) and nami (wave). Appropriate naming, as some 80 percent of all tsunamis occur in the Pacific Ocean and Japan has suffered many, some coming from as far away as South America. Tsunamis are often incorrectly called tidal waves, but tides have nothing to do with them (though the damage may be worse if a tsunami hits at high tide). A tsunami (pronounced tsoo-nah-mee) is a wave train, or series of waves, generated in a body of water by an impulsive disturbance that vertically displaces the water column. Earthquakes, landslides, volcanic eruptions, explosions, and even the impact of cosmic bodies, such as meteorites, can generate tsunamis. Tsunamis can savagely attack coastlines, causing devastating property damage and loss of life. Tsunamis are unlike wind-generated waves, which many of us may have observed on a local lake or at a coastal beach, in that they are characterized as shallow-water waves, with long periods and wave lengths. The wind-generated swell one sees at a California beach, for example, spawned by a storm out in the Pacific and rhythmically rolling in, one wave after another, might have a period of about 10 seconds and a wave length of 150 m. A tsunami, on the other hand, can have a wavelength in excess of 100 km and period on the order of one hour.

    8. Nearctica - Geology - Earthquakes - Tsunamis
    Earthquakes tsunamis. Click Here. Special Segments. Butterflies of CommercialOrganizations. Return to geology. Main Page. . Click Here.
    http://www.nearctica.com/geology/quake/tsunami.htm
    Earthquakes - Tsunamis Special Segments Butterflies of North America Conifers of North America Eastern Birds List of N.A. Insects Home Eastern Wildflowers General Topics Natural History Ecology Family Environment Evolution Home Education Home Conservation Geophysics Paleontology Commercial Organizations Return to Geology Main Page Books About Earthquakes Tsunamis are large water, typically oceanic, waves, and are usually
    generated by seismic activity. They are sometimes mistakenly called "Tidal Waves". The Tsunami Page of Dr. George Pararas-Carayannis . A great site on tsunamis with a series of frequently asked questions about these gigantic waves, extensive articles on famous tsunamis throughout history, and links and information about the warning systems in place to help protect people. Highly recommended. Tsunami . University of Washington. This great web site has information about tsunamis including material about how tsunamis are generated. There is also a survey of great tsunamis of the past, the tsunami warning system, and ways to mitigate the hazards of these tidal waves. You'll also find information on recent tsunami events, research, and a set of links to other sites on the web with tsunami information. Tsunami Database National Geophyiscal Data Center, NOAA

    9. Washington DGER: Tsunamis
    modified from Open File Report 984, tsunamis on the Digital Bibliography of theGeology and Mineral Resources of Washington Including the Tsunami Library
    http://www.dnr.wa.gov/geology/hazards/tsunami.htm
    Tsunami Publications Tsunami Links Tsunami News
    Tsunamis
    The Pacific Coast of Washington is at risk from tsunamis. These destructive waves can be caused by coastal or submarine landslides or volcanism, but they are most commonly caused by large submarine earthquakes. Tsunamis are generated when these geologic events cause large, rapid movements in the sea floor that displace the water column above. That swift change creates a series of high-energy waves that radiate outward like pond ripples. Offshore tsunamis would strike the adjacent shorelines within minutes and also cross the ocean at speeds as great as 600 miles per hour to strike distant shores. In 1946, a tsunami was initiated by an earthquake in the Aleutian Islands of Alaska; in less than 5 hours, it reached Hawaii with waves as high as 55 feet and killed 173 people. Tsunami waves can continue for hours. The first wave can be followed by others a few minutes or a few hours later, and the later waves are commonly larger. The first wave to strike Crescent City, California, caused by the Alaska earthquake in Prince William Sound in 1964, was 9 feet above the tide level; the second, 29 minutes later, was 6 feet above tide, the third was about 11 feet above the tide level, and the fourth, most damaging wave was more than 16 feet above the tide level. The third and fourth waves killed 11 people. Estimates of the damage range from $7.4 million to $16 million (in 1964 dollars). That same tsunami destroyed property in many areas along the coast from Alaska to California. In Washington alone, that tsunami caused $105,000 (in 1964 dollars) in damage.

    10. Geology, Pictures Of Earthquakes, Natural Disasters, Photos, Photographs, By Wer
    in the Vault are images of We have extensive coverage of the Loma Prieta Earthquake(San Francisco), Plate Tectonics tsunamis - geology - Natural Disasters.
    http://www.photovault.com/Link/Disasters/a/Earthquakes/DAEVolume01.html
    PHOTOVALET (tm)
    Enter search term
    Disasters Earthquakes Volume 1, Images by Wernher Krutein with Contributions from Steven Felsch, Guerdon Trueblood, Mark Leialoha, and PHOTOVAULT
    T his page contains samples from our picture files on Earthquakes . These images are available for licensing in any media. For Pricing, General Guidelines, and Delivery information click here . You may contact us thru email or by phone for more information on the use of these images, and any others in our files not shown here. You may also use our search engine PHOTOVALET (tm) to find other images not found on this page. Please do not ask us or email us for free use of these images! Our Earthquake images can be linked to as follows: Earthquakes Volume 1, Earthquakes Volume 2 Earthquakes Volume 3 Earthquakes Volume 4
    Included in the Vault are images of: We have extensive coverage of the Loma Prieta Earthquake (San Francisco), Plate Tectonics - Tsunamis - Geology - Natural Disasters
    See also: DISASTERS Earthquakes, Fires Storms and Floods Volcano and Lava Weather ... MILITARY
    Click on any of the thumbnail images below to view an enlarged photo Back to Category listings.

    11. Index Of /ftp/geology/tsunamis
    Parent Directory chile.ps.gz 15-Mar-1996 1326 112K doomsday......Index of /ftp/geology/tsunamis. Name Last modified Size
    http://sepwww.stanford.edu/ftp/geology/tsunamis/
    Index of /ftp/geology/tsunamis
    Name Last modified Size Description ... chile.ps.gz 15-Mar-1996 13:26 112K doomsday.gif 15-Mar-1996 13:26 51K honolulu.ps.gz 15-Mar-1996 13:26 108K unimak.ps.gz 15-Mar-1996 13:26 62K Apache/2.0.49 (Unix) Server at sepwww.stanford.edu Port 80

    12. Index Of /ftp/geology/tsunamis
    Parent Directory unimak.ps.gz 15-Mar-1996 1326 62K honolulu......Index of /ftp/geology/tsunamis. Name Last modified Size
    http://sepwww.stanford.edu/ftp/geology/tsunamis/?C=N;O=D

    13. Science, Earth Sciences, Geology, Geologic Hazards, Tsunami: Warning Centers
    tsunamis About.com - Annotated collection of links and articles, includingadvisories, physics of tsunamis, and research references.
    http://www.combose.com/Science/Earth_Sciences/Geology/Geologic_Hazards/Tsunami/W
    Top Science Earth Sciences Geology ...
    Help build the largest human-edited directory on the web. Submit a Site Open Directory Project Become an Editor The combose.com directory is based on the Open Directory and has been modified and enhanced using our own technology. About ComboSE Download Combose Toolbar

    14. Science, Earth Sciences, Geology, Geologic Hazards: Tsunami
    British Columbia Tsunami Preparedness Information brochures, reports and firsthandaccounts of past tsunamis, and other information on preparedness and
    http://www.combose.com/Science/Earth_Sciences/Geology/Geologic_Hazards/Tsunami/
    Top Science Earth Sciences Geology ... Warning Centers Related links of interest:

    15. Neill's Geology: Disasters!
    But erosion and mudflows pull down the mountains, and make room for newones. geology is just one big cycle after another. 3. tsunamis!
    http://members.tripod.com/~ciara_n/geology/disaster.html
    var cm_role = "live" var cm_host = "tripod.lycos.com" var cm_taxid = "/memberembedded"
    Neill's Geology:
    Disasters!
    Home Glaciologists Marine Geologists Paleontologists ... Gemmologists
    Landslides
    When you here the word Landslide ! what do you think of? You say you think of a mass of snow, rocks, or wet mud sliding down from a high altitude triggered by a catalyst event? By golly, you're right!
    Landslides occur along something called (are you ready?) a plane of structural weakness ! So what, you say? Well, that means that all this muck coming down the side of the mountain, heading straight for you and your dog and your little log shack, is following the path of least resistance. The plane of structural weakness ! is the term for a path, in the mountain, that is relatively free of debris and usually is between the two highest points of the mountain.
    Some landslides are called mudflows , and, man, you would never saturation ). Mudflows are so strong sometimes that they carry enourmous boulders down the mountain. If the mudflow is really big, it can destroy nearby towns. I'm not kidding.
    Some mudflows are active for years ! Isn't that amazing? It's all part of the really super cool way that Geology works: Volcanoes and converging plates push mountains up, and mudflows and rain tear them back down, bit by tiny bit, over thousands of years, until they are flat. See, without mudflows and

    16. Science - Earth Sciences - Geology - Geologic Hazards - Tsunami
    Top Science Earth Sciences geology Geologic Hazards Tsunami Warning Centers tsunamis About.com - Annotated collection of links and articles, including
    http://www.sedirectory.net/Science/Earth_Sciences/Geology/Geologic_Hazards/Tsuna
    Web Hosting Dir Web Design Dir Search Engine Dir Hardware Info ... Search Engine Directory Search: Top Science Earth Sciences Geology ...

    17. The Educational Encyclopedia, Geology Disasters And Earthquakes
    hazards earthquakes, plate tectonics, tsunamis, landslides, seismic waves, seismology,geology, fault, San Andreas fault, earthquake in Turkey, Izmit.
    http://users.telenet.be/educypedia/education/geologydisasters.htm
    Science Animals Biology Botany Bouw ... Resources Geology Disasters Earthquakes Floods General overview Geysers ... Volcano topics Disasters see also The weather Tsunamis Almanac of disasters fires, earthquakes, transportation Avalanches many people get killed every year because of avalanches Avalanches tutorial Avalanches Disaster image catalog pictures and images Disasters of nature Earthforces earth science, plate tectonics, volcano, earthquake, tsunami, floods Forest fires there are two ways a forest fire can be created: natural and by humans Landslides the term landslide refers to the downslope movement of masses of rock and soil. Landslides are caused by one or a combination of the following factors: change in slope gradient, increasing the load the land must bear, shocks and vibrations, change in water content, ground water movement, frost action, weathering of rocks, and removal or changing the type of vegetation covering slopes Natural hazards photographs of damage caused by natural hazards Savage earth if our planet is a sleeping giant, it slumbers fitfully, slowly and insidiously, earthquakes, volcanoes, tsunamis, and other natural disasters. Highlights include animated illustrations

    18. The Educational Encyclopedia, Educypedia, Hurricanes, Tsunamis And Tornadoes, Tr
    Tsunami research group tsunamis, earthquake geology, geophysics, civil engineering,fluid dynamics, aerospace engineering, remote sensing, geotechnical
    http://users.telenet.be/educypedia/education/climatehurricanes.htm
    Science Animals Biology Botany Bouw ... Resources Climate Climate topics General overview Hurricanes, tsunamis and tornadoes Lightning Archived satellite images, storm animations and special events Earthforces earth science, plate tectonics, volcano, earthquake, tsunami, floods FAQ - hurricanes, typhoons, and tropical cyclones the terms "hurricane" and "typhoon" are regionally specific names for a strong "tropical cyclone". A tropical cyclone is the generic term for a non-frontal synoptic scale low-pressure system over tropical or sub-tropical waters with organized convection (i.e. thunderstorm activity) and definite cyclonic surface wind circulation Hurricanes, tsunamis, floods and tornadoes from space also clouds and volcanoes Hurricanes, typhoons and tropical cyclones FAQ Savage earth if our planet is a sleeping giant, it slumbers fitfully, slowly and insidiously, earthquakes, volcanoes, tsunamis, and other natural disasters. Highlights include animated illustrations Tropical cyclone and hurricane glossary Tropical storms worldwide Anatomy of a hurricane Cyclone names ... Cyclones tropical cyclones (also known as hurricanes in North America and typhoons in Asia) are giant whirlwinds of air and dense cloud spiraling at over 120 km/hr around a central 'eye' of extreme low pressure Details of the hurricane eye's structure How a hurricane forms How hurricanes work Hyperhurricanes ... Hurricane archives hurricane information including charts on the track of the storm plus a text based table of tracking information

    19. NC Museum Of Natural Sciences - Fun Stuff: FAQ Pages: Tsunamis
    A good general FAQ on tsunamis comes from the Federal Emergency Management Agency ofthe edge of the continent at the Museum on the geology Overlook interactive
    http://www.naturalsciences.org/funstuff/faqs/tsunami.html
    by Chris Tacker, Curator of Geology What is a tsunami? What is down there, offshore of North Carolina? Why do scientists think a tsunami is a hazard for the North Carolina coast? When did the Albemarle-Currituck slide take place? ... Cool Links What is a tsunami? Tsunami is a Japanese word meaning "harbor wave." A common English phrase is "tidal wave" although tsunamis are not a result of tides. They are giant sea waves. A good general FAQ on tsunamis comes from the Federal Emergency Management Agency . It is also available in .pdf format What is down there, offshore of North Carolina? In terms of plate tectonics, the Atlantic Coast is a passive margin . It is not undergoing any collisions, like the West Coast, and it is not tearing apart like a rift zone. Ever since Africa pulled away about 200 million years ago, the edge of North America has cooled and subsided, with layers of sediment piling up on top of it. Rather than layers like a cake, these layers generally resemble wedges, with the thin part pointed at the land, and the thick part pointing offshore. We know a good bit about what’s down there from seismic surveys, sidescan sonar, satellite telemetry and from offshore drilling. These sediments are often hosts to petroleum deposits. Underneath Cape Hatteras, the pile of sediments is nearly 10,000 feet thick. Sediments are present that date back to the Jurassic. Under Cape Fear, the sediments are only about 1,500 feet thick. The sediments here date back to the Cretaceous.

    20. ScienceDaily -- Browse Topics: Science/Earth_Sciences/Geology/Geologic_Hazards/T
    ago. Their findings are likely to affect the region s precautionsagainst future earthquakes and tsunamis. full story. Japanese
    http://www.sciencedaily.com/directory/Science/Earth_Sciences/Geology/Geologic_Ha
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    Real Estate Lookup Front Page Today's Digest Week in Review Email Updates ... Geologic Hazards Tsunami (24 links) See Also: News about Tsunami 1700 Japan Tsunami Linked To Massive North American Quake (November 21, 2003) full story Japanese Shipwreck Adds To Evidence Of Great Cascadia Earthquake In 1700 (October 31, 2003) full story Massive Tsunami Sweeps Atlantic Coast In Asteroid Impact Scenario For March 16, 2880 (May 28, 2003) full story Worried About Asteroid-Ocean Impacts? Don't Sweat The Small Stuff (March 18, 2003) full story New Wave Supercomputers Catch Big Waves (June 6, 2002)

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