Tsunami 190907112349
Tsunami 190907112349
Tsunami 190907112349
ON
“TSUNAMI”
Submintted To
MAHARSHI DAYANAND UNIVERSITY, ROHTAK
In partial fulfilment of the requirement for the award of degree of
M.D.UNIVERSITY (ROHTAK)
DAV CENTENARY COLLEGE
NH-3 , NIT , FARIDABAD
CONTENT
1. Tsunami
2. Generation of tsunami
3. Types of tsunami
4. Causes of tsunami
5. Characteristics
6. Tsunami warning system
7. Seismograph
8. How to prevent us from tsunami
9. Drawback
10. Facts about tsunami
11. History of tsunami
TSUNAMI
What is tsunami?
A tsunami or tidal wave, also known as a seismic sea
wave, is a series of waves in a water body caused by the
displacement of a large volume of water, generally in an ocean
or a large lake is known as tsunami.
Local Tsunami
A local tsunami is a tsunami that causes damage in relatively
close proximity to the tsunami-causing event. Specifically, the
underwater event -- usually an earthquake -- that produces a
local tsunami happens within 100 km, which is a little over 60
miles, of the land damage that results.This does not provide
sufficient time for comprehensive evacuations.
Regional Tsunami
A regional tsunami is one that causes damage from 100 km to
1,000 km from the underwater event that causes the tsunami.
Regional tsunamis provide slightly more warning time than local
tsunamis, making landfall between one and three hours of the
event that causes them. Within the 1,000 km area, just one to
three hours may not provide enough time for people to
evacuate safely.
Distant Tsunami
A distant tsunami, also called a tele-tsunami or ocean-wide
tsunami -- originates with an exceptionally powerful and
destructive event more than 1,000 km away from landfall.
Though a distant tsunami may first appear like a local tsunami,
it travels across wide swathes of ocean basin. but it also covers
a larger mass of land and tends to cause extensive and
widespread destruction.
CAUSES OF TSUNAMI
EARTHQUAKE
The majority of recorded tsunamis caused by powerful
earthquakes on the ocean floor are results of tectonic plate
movements. When these plates move past each other
suddenly, it causes an earthquake that, in turn, makes the
overlying water to move.
(Large meteorites)
(Nuclear explosion)
TSUNAMI WARNING SYSTEM
Seismic waves are divided into two types: body waves and
surface waves
(seismograph)
HOW TO PREVENT US FROM
TSUNAMI
TOP TIPS:-
Fact 12: Tsunamis can travel as fast as 5000 miles per hour,
without being noticed and can cross the entire ocean in less
than a day.
Fact 14: Tsunami waves get stronger as they succeed and not
usually the first hit is that impactful as the succeeding ones.
The first English use of the word happened more than 100
years ago, says linguist Ben Zimmer, of the Visual Thesaurus.
That's when an earthquake struck off the east coast of Japan,
very close to where the recent tsunami hit.