Wind can't form a tsunami. A tsunami is only caused by a large displacement of water. This is done only by an earthquake, a volcano eruption, a landslide, or a meteorite impact.
No Tsunamis are not formed by wind events
A tsunami is not a wind-related event, so the wind could be going any speed.
None. A tsunami is not wind-related. It is a massive surge of water.
No. A tsunami is a massive surge of water. Wind is not involved at all.
A "tsunami" is not a land form, it is a wave.
there was an underwater earthquake witch created the tsunami
The correct spelling is tsunami (from the Japanese for harbor wave).
Usually there will be wind, but that is simply because the wind is usually blowing anyway. Tsunamis and volcanoes do not relate to wind.
Tsunamis are not wind-related events. Therefore, the wind you experience during a tsunamis is whatever it happens to be at the time.
Wind typically does not directly cause tsunamis, as they are mainly generated by undersea earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, or underwater landslides. However, strong winds can alter the surface of the ocean, influencing the propagation and behavior of tsunami waves as they travel across the water. Wind can cause some distortion in the tsunami wave, but it is usually minor compared to the influence of the initial source of the tsunami.
wind or air
They can be predicted with weather tools and whatnot. They can see the motion of the wind and all that.