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Thread: What is a tsumani

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    What is a tsumani

    Hello All,
    I am sharing with you some information on tsumani:

    What is a tsunami?
    A tsunami (pronounced su-nah-me) 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.
    What does "tsunami" mean?
    Tsunami is a Japanese word with the English translation, "harbor wave." Represented by two characters, the top character, "tsu," means harbor, while the bottom character, "nami," means "wave." In the past, tsunamis were sometimes referred to as "tidal waves" by the general public, and as "seismic sea waves" by the scientific community. The term "tidal wave" is a misnomer; although a tsunami's impact upon a coastline is dependent upon the tidal level at the time a tsunami strikes, tsunamis are unrelated to the tides. Tides result from the imbalanced, extraterrestrial, gravitational influences of the moon, sun, and planets. The term "seismic sea wave" is also misleading. "Seismic" implies an earthquake-related generation mechanism, but a tsunami can also be caused by a non-seismic event, such as a landslide or meteorite impact.
    How do tsunamis differ from other water waves?
    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 characterised 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.
    As a result of their long wave lengths, tsunamis behave as shallow-water waves. A wave becomes a shallow-water wave when the ratio between the water depth and its wave length gets very small. Shallow-water waves move at a speed that is equal to the square root of the product of the acceleration of gravity (9.8 m/s/s) and the water depth. Let's see what this implies: In the Pacific Ocean, where the typical water depth is about 4000 m, a tsunami travels at about 200 m/s, or over 700 km/hr. Because the rate at which a wave loses its energy is inversely related to its wave length, tsunamis not only propagate at high speeds, they can also travel great, transoceanic distances with limited energy losses. The earthquake-generated 1960 Chilean tsunami, for instance, travelled across over 17,000 km across the Pacific to hit Japan. The wave crests bend as the tsunami travels - this is called refraction. Wave refraction is caused by segments of the wave moving at different speeds as the water depth along the crest varies.
    How do earthquakes generate tsunamis?
    Tsunamis can be generated when the sea floor abruptly deforms and vertically displaces the overlying water. Tectonic earthquakes are a particular kind of earthquake that are associated with the earth's crustal deformation; when these earthquakes occur beneath the sea, the water above the deformed area is displaced from its equilibrium position. Waves are formed as the displaced water mass, which acts under the influence of gravity, attempts to regain its equilibrium. When large areas of the sea floor elevate or subside, a tsunami can be created. Large vertical movements of the earth's crust can occur at plate boundaries. Plates interact along these boundaries called faults. Around the margins of the Pacific Ocean, for example, denser oceanic plates slip under continental plates in a process known as subduction. Subduction earthquakes are particularly effective in generating tsunamis.
    How do landslides, volcanic eruptions, and cosmic collisions generate tsunamis?
    A tsunami can be generated by any disturbance that displaces a large water mass from its equilibrium position. In the case of earthquake-generated tsunamis, the water column is disturbed by the uplift or subsidence of the sea floor. Submarine landslides, which often accompany large earthquakes, as well as collapses of volcanic edifices, can also disturb the overlying water column as sediment and rock slump downslope and are redistributed across the sea floor. Similarly, a violent submarine volcanic eruption can create an impulsive force that uplifts the water column and generates a tsunami. Conversely, supermarine landslides and cosmic-body impacts disturb the water from above, as momentum from falling debris is transferred to the water into which the debris falls. Generally speaking, tsuna-mis generated from these
    mechanisms, unlike the Pacific-wide tsunamis caused by some earthquakes, dissipate quickly and rarely affect coastlines distant from the source area.
    What happens to a tsunami as it approaches land?
    As a tsunami leaves the deep water of the open ocean and travels into the shallower water near the coast, it transforms. If you read the "How do tsunamis differ from other water waves?" section, you discovered that a tsunami travels at a speed that is related to the water depth - hence, as the water depth decreases, the tsunami slows. The tsunami's energy flux, which is dependent on both its wave speed and wave height, remains nearly constant. Consequently, as the tsunami's speed diminishes as it travels into shallower water, its height grows. Because of this shoaling effect, a tsunami, imperceptible at sea, may grow to be several meters or more in height near the coast. When it finally reaches the coast, a tsunami may appear as a rapidly rising or falling tide, a series of breaking waves, or even a bore.
    What happens when a tsunami encounters land?
    As a tsunami approaches shore, we've learned in the "What happens to a tsunami as it approaches land?" section that it begins to slow and grow in height. Just like other water waves, tsunamis begin to lose energy as they rush onshore - part of the wave energy is reflected offshore, while the shoreward-propagating wave energy is dissipated through bottom friction and turbulence. Despite these losses, tsunamis still reach the coast with tremendous amounts of energy. Tsunamis have great erosional potential, stripping beaches of sand that may have taken years to accumulate and undermining trees and other coastal vegetation. Capable of inundating, or flooding, hundreds of meters inland past the typical high-water level, the fast-moving water associated with the inundating tsunami can crush homes and other coastal structures. Tsuna-mis may reach a maximum vertical height onshore above sea level, often called a run-up height, of 10, 20, and even 30 meters.


    Death toll from tsumani has surpassed 120,000 by Thursday.

    Best regards,

    Optom

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    Just An Optician jediron1's Avatar
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    Optom said:

    Death toll from tsumani has surpassed 120,000 by Thursday.


    Unfortunately I just heard last night Sat. Jan 1,2005 that the death toll is now
    at 150,000 and climbing. Very very sad!

    On another item why has there been nothing said about all the Sudanese that are being systematically wiped out. Right now over a MILLION Sudanese people
    have been killed and no one is saying a word, this is unbelievable!

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    Quote Originally Posted by jediron1
    Optom said:

    Death toll from tsumani has surpassed 120,000 by Thursday.


    Unfortunately I just heard last night Sat. Jan 1,2005 that the death toll is now
    at 150,000 and climbing. Very very sad!

    On another item why has there been nothing said about all the Sudanese that are being systematically wiped out. Right now over a MILLION Sudanese people
    have been killed and no one is saying a word, this is unbelievable!
    That is media.

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    Just An Optician jediron1's Avatar
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    I said:On another item why has there been nothing said about all the Sudanese that are being systematically wiped out. Right now over a MILLION Sudanese people
    have been killed and no one is saying a word, this is unbelievable!


    I think one of the reasons your not hearing about the Sudanese atrocity is that the Sudan is not a vacation spot for the Europeans and others in the Westernize part of the world. That is a sad commentary on todays world when nations of the world rush there cameras to grab a shot of something or someone who had a tragedy in there family while on vacation while Millions are killed in the Sudan!
    Unbelievable!

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    Quote Originally Posted by jediron1
    On another item why has there been nothing said about all the Sudanese that are being systematically wiped out. Right now over a MILLION Sudanese people have been killed and no one is saying a word, this is unbelievable!
    Listen to NPR, they've been reporting on it for at least 6 months. Colin Powel visited months ago, but I guess he couldn't convince W that the situation was dire. Or W didn't want to hear it.
    ...Just ask me...

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    Just An Optician jediron1's Avatar
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    My point being you have heard nothing on the networks, ABC, NBC or FOX or the cable channels. All of a sudden because of this tragic wave we have dozen's of news people trying to cover the story while the real story is in the Sudan. And your right Colin Powell did bring it up and nobody lisdened! Shows where most peoples hearts are!

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    Sudan Crisis

    Hello,

    Jediron1 said:

    On another item why has there been nothing said about all the Sudanese that are being systematically wiped out. Right now over a MILLION Sudanese people have been killed and no one is saying a word, this is unbelievable!

    I agree with you.Sudan civil war is the world's ongoing humanitarian crisis.Good news is the Sudaneses goverment and rebels in southern Sudan have signed permanent truce and a deal on how to implement a series of peace agreement during their recent celebration of 49th anniversary of independence.I believe there an intense ongoing effort from the international community,the UN and the African Union countries to achieve stability and security in that country.African Union has established its HQ in Darfur.Let us hope for good.The tragedy of Rwanda is on the conscience of the international community.
    On the other hand,tsumani is not a man made calamity.

    Best regards,

    Optom

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    optom said:

    On the other hand,tsumani is not a man made calamity.

    True, but man's inhummanity to man is deployable especially in the Sudanese case. But I still don't get the point, if you have a natural disaster that explains why millions start pouring into a region but if you have man against man it does not count as a disaster? You mean to tell me that we have all forgotten the MILLIONS that were killed by Stalin in his gulags and the MILLIONS that were systematical killed in china? We have forgotten that! Unbelievable what people choose to forget and go about there lives like nothing has happened.

    "Friends, Romans,countrymen, lend me your ears; I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him.

    Shakespeare wrote The Tragedy of Julius Caesar in 1599

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    Optom said:

    I agree with you.Sudan civil war is the world's ongoing humanitarian crisis.


    I just heard on the tv that 147,000 died in the tsunami and they expect more, maybe as many as 200,000. That is tragic! Then the announcer went on to say that in Africa especially in areas like the Sudan 147,000 PEOPLE DIE PER DAY!
    Now where is the relief help for these people? Nobody wants to address this situation even though Colin Powell did try, I think with his position he could have pushed a little harder and gotten something done. I sure hope race is not the reason that these people are recieving hardly any aid at all because if it is and no one will admit it, then SHAME on them for even letting it get this far! Whats going on in Africa is in Pandemic proportions and no one is doing a thing to help compared to what they are doing in South Asia.

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    Master OptiBoarder chm2023's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by jediron1
    Optom said:

    I agree with you.Sudan civil war is the world's ongoing humanitarian crisis.


    I just heard on the tv that 147,000 died in the tsunami and they expect more, maybe as many as 200,000. That is tragic! Then the announcer went on to say that in Africa especially in areas like the Sudan 147,000 PEOPLE DIE PER DAY!
    Now where is the relief help for these people? Nobody wants to address this situation even though Colin Powell did try, I think with his position he could have pushed a little harder and gotten something done. I sure hope race is not the reason that these people are recieving hardly any aid at all because if it is and no one will admit it, then SHAME on them for even letting it get this far! Whats going on in Africa is in Pandemic proportions and no one is doing a thing to help compared to what they are doing in South Asia.

    There is some passive racism here I think; probably more exactly people do not understand the internal issues and given the chauvinistic nature of US media don't have ready access to the information that would help them understand. They see it as a big mess with no beginning and no end. This in contrast to the tsusami situation: big, dramatic, freaky--and highly photographic--event. All black and white (ask the next couple of people you meet to explain what happened in Indonesia/Sri Lanka etc; then ask them to explain what happened in the Sudan) everyone on the same side, everyone agrees what needs to be done, no hard decisions, no enemy ready to resist your efforts. This is a situation where you can ride in on your white horse and pat yourself on your back--who can resist?

    It's not an excuse, just an explanation. People and governments take the path of least resistance, was ever thus.

    A couple of interesting articles. It seems neither Bush nor Clinton have covered themselves in glory here. Clinton's policy too punitive, Bush's policy too confused.

    http://www.sudantribune.com/article....d_article=7223

    http://www.sudantribune.com/article....d_article=6319
    Last edited by chm2023; 01-08-2005 at 09:11 AM.

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    Just An Optician jediron1's Avatar
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    Chm 2023 said:This is a situation where you can ride in on your white horse and pat yourself on your back--who can resist?

    I sure hope that is not the case. Your just coming in to get the public on your side? There are relief agences in Africa that could get the job done. Personnally I think if this is true it is a sad commentary on society as a whole!

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    Quote Originally Posted by jediron1
    Chm 2023 said:This is a situation where you can ride in on your white horse and pat yourself on your back--who can resist?

    I sure hope that is not the case. Your just coming in to get the public on your side? There are relief agences in Africa that could get the job done. Personnally I think if this is true it is a sad commentary on society as a whole!
    It's not a question of good PR--I hope I didn't imply that--it's just a question of a no-brainer situation versus one that would require asking and answering a lot of hard questions. (I read your post as asking why aid is so forthcoming for the tsumani victims as opposed to the stop/start efforts in the Sudan).

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    More...

    Hello,

    Don’t forget other worst genocide and gendercides. Of Bosnia-Herzegovina it is estimated more than 400,000 men had been killed, 3 million people had been reduced to refugees. An estimated 60,000 Bosnian Muslim women had been raped and terrorized by Bosnian Serb soldiers in a systematic campaign. More than 700,000 Tutsis were slaughtered - men, women, children and babies in Rwanda, all these, as the super power politicians, the U.N. and the international community looking on! Here the basic humanitarian aid was absent.

    These were intentional man made disasters.

    On the other hand natural disasters like Tsumani arise without direct human involvement, overwhelming the world community to mobilize emergency humanitarian assistances. You can only feel such tragedy when you understand the suffering that its victims feel on a personal level. Photographs, media and reports have relatively little impact when compared to the effect of hearing tales of how a mother had her child stolen from her arms by the Tsunami or how a father has lost 5 of his children.

    The lesson to us from disaster like Tsunami is that the nature is greatest creator and destroyer. We are reminded of just how precious and fragile life really is. We are reminded of what the most important things in life really are.

    I don’t understand rationale of associating Sudan to Tsumani.

    Best regards,

    Optom

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    optom said:I don’t understand rationale of associating Sudan to Tsumani.

    I was not trying to associate The Sudan to a Tsumani. What I was trying to say and I may of said it poorly was that you have millions pouring into countries just days after the Tsumani, where as in the Sudan there has been a genocide going on for years without so much as a wimper coming or money or food from the west. Except for Colin Powell I have heard no other person speak out on this astrocity. Just like no one said anything about the astrocities in Stalin's gulags or the astrocities in the German death camps people were silent. That is my point, some one has to say something when these things happen, you can't be like an ostrich and stick your head in the sand you have to speak up!

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    Hello Jediron1

    You have said the truth and I am cent percent with you. We know and history teaches us that when it comes to men to men atrocities it has always been difficult often with no solution. Anyway, we were just talking on different disaster, it is really heart warming to see how world convened to help victims of tsunami regardless of race, color or religion. Poorest African country Mozambique has donated US$100.000 to tsumani aid where the maximum wage of worker is not more than $20.00 per month. I wish the world remain this way always.

    Best regards,

    Optom

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