it is unrelated. a tsunami happens when the tectonic plates under the seabed moves and creates a hole. this movement creates a difference in pressure and hence the water goes in inside the hole. as the pressure builds in inside the hole, a large body of water bursts out. That is a tsunami
rain happens when the water vapor in the cloud is too much and because of condensation, the water vapor drops as rain.
it is unrelated.
no it did not
There can be any amount of rain or no rain at all. A tsunami is not a weather-related event but a geologic event usually triggered by an earthquake.
No, heavy rain cannot cause a tsunami. Tsunamis are typically generated by underwater tectonic plate movements, such as earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, or landslides. Heavy rain does not have the same energy or mechanism to produce 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.
A tsunami is a large wave caused by an earthquake, and as such it is not really a kind of weather, but it does have the capacity to get things wet, much like rain, only more so. Tsunamis are created when there is a huge explosion like an earthquake. Imagine that a rock is it the ripple rise and that represents the tsunami.
wind
Yes. Tsunamis are completely independent of the weather. It can be sunny, raining, snowing, or anything else.
yes but it rarely happens yes but it is not usual because most rainforesest arent near the ocean
Lots of things like drowning people, Floods, tsunami's, heavy rain, dirty water can get you sick, mud slides (you need heavy rain for that to.) etc. Alot of things really.
exacty 9:08am Rain will fall, by 20 past 9 it will be thunder and lighting, by 9:53 the tsunami will hit and tornados and then the world will end. EXCACTLY 9:53
wind rain storms earthquakes huricanes snow tsunami and a whole lot more but you figure it out the rest by your own
its called a tsunami