I must agree with previous posters that this is not a tsunami. tsunamis have huge wavelengths, and at sea are unnoticeable. The only way you would detect one is if you were measuring the depth of the ocean for the entire period that the tsunami passed. ...
I must agree with previous posters that this is not a tsunami. tsunamis have huge wavelengths, and at sea are unnoticeable. The only way you would detect one is if you were measuring the depth of the ocean for the entire period that the tsunami passed. you would notice an increase in depth of several meters, and then a decrease back to the normal state over the course of several minutes.
Tsunamis are never breaking waves, notice this one is nearly breaking. It could very well be a small rouge wave, as a previous poster mentioned.
Posted by guy who took a class on natural disasters (guest) on Wed Mar 23 03:47:18 2011
tsunami_at_sea
That video was shown on tv; it was filmed of a japanese boat coast guard boat. They launched an tsunami alert due to this footage.
Posted by cienta (guest) on Wed Mar 23 03:45:30 2011
Not Tsunami
If that was a tsunami, then the boat would have raised up to a crest and then stayed at that height for a little while.
Posted by Guest on Tue Mar 22 09:27:07 2011
in the future only people with house boats will survive... who ever wins we lose.
Posted by Guest on Mon Mar 21 19:28:45 2011
Why
does the boat not have any jiggly bewbs at the prow?
That would be kinda hot.
Posted by Guest on Mon Mar 21 05:26:04 2011
That's more like a baby rogue wave. Tsunamis don't cause much surface disturbance while they're at sea.
Recent comments
its a tsunami
The wave gets bigger as the sea floor shallows.
Watch the discovery channel and learn about mega-thrust earthquakes cuddy.
Posted by Guest on Thu Mar 24 15:15:08 2011
not tsunami
| show fullshow summaryI must agree with previous posters that this is not a tsunami. tsunamis have huge wavelengths, and at sea are unnoticeable. The only way you would detect one is if you were measuring the depth of the ocean for the entire period that the tsunami passed. ...
I must agree with previous posters that this is not a tsunami. tsunamis have huge wavelengths, and at sea are unnoticeable. The only way you would detect one is if you were measuring the depth of the ocean for the entire period that the tsunami passed. you would notice an increase in depth of several meters, and then a decrease back to the normal state over the course of several minutes.
Tsunamis are never breaking waves, notice this one is nearly breaking. It could very well be a small rouge wave, as a previous poster mentioned.
Posted by guy who took a class on natural disasters (guest) on Wed Mar 23 03:47:18 2011
tsunami_at_sea
That video was shown on tv; it was filmed of a japanese boat coast guard boat. They launched an tsunami alert due to this footage.
Posted by cienta (guest) on Wed Mar 23 03:45:30 2011
Not Tsunami
If that was a tsunami, then the boat would have raised up to a crest and then stayed at that height for a little while.
Posted by Guest on Tue Mar 22 09:27:07 2011
in the future only people with house boats will survive... who ever wins we lose.
Posted by Guest on Mon Mar 21 19:28:45 2011
Why
does the boat not have any jiggly bewbs at the prow?
That would be kinda hot.
Posted by Guest on Mon Mar 21 05:26:04 2011
That's more like a baby rogue wave. Tsunamis don't cause much surface disturbance while they're at sea.
Posted by Guest on Sun Mar 20 23:10:51 2011