Yes. Tsunamis are completely independent of the weather. It can be sunny, raining, snowing, or anything else.
26th December 2004
3:00pm
No, an example of this is japan when the earthquake occurred in the middle of the ocean this sent tremors through the earth which caused waves to be sent out from the point of the quake, a tsunami is when the huge waves hit land, when these waves hit japan it was a tsunami
At the time it was overcast. Some areas were experiencing rain or snow. The tsunami was not related to the weather, but was instead the result of an earthquake.
No, the earthquake in the ocean cause the water to make the tsunami
Drought.
No, it is not physically possible for it to rain everywhere on earth at the same time due to the Earth's size and weather patterns. Weather systems are localized and can cover large areas, but not the entire planet simultaneously.
The most recent major tsunami occurred in 2019, when a 7.2 magnitude earthquake triggered a tsunami in Indonesia. Tsunamis can happen at any time due to undersea earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, or landslides. It is important to be prepared and informed about tsunami risks in vulnerable regions.
Tsunamis and thunderstorms are completely unrelated phenomena. It is definitely possible for a thunderstorm and a tsunami to occur in the same place at the same time, but it would be entirely by coincidence.
There would be catastrophic flooding and water damage from the two disasters. A tsunami can itself be considered a kind of flood.
It is highly Possibility that a tsunami not if but when it will happen and could take out the east coast from maine to Florida the chances in our life time is 1 in 1000
Tsunamis can occur at any time of day or night, but they are more likely to happen following an earthquake or underwater volcanic eruption. Tsunamis are most common in the Pacific Ocean's "Ring of Fire." It is important to have an early warning system in place to mitigate the impact of a tsunami.