The true tidal wave is, of course, a product of the tides. There are places in the world where the tides produce a surge up a river mouth or some such restricted channel that is a notable ridge of water. They are not all that big: five-six feet high at the very most.
A tsunami is the wave produce by some catastrophic event. They can be very large indeed. An earthquake can cause an underwater ridge of sediment to collapse and the redistribution of the ocean water causes Tsunamis. An exploding volcanic island is a rarer cause for a Tsunami as are large meteorites.
Most people who haven't spent the last fifteen years in a cave, wearing a blindfold and earmuffs, with their head buried in three feet of sand know what a tsunami is, or at least what it looks like. While I enjoy horsing around as much as anyone-and more than most people-there was nothing remotely funny about the Christmas Day tsunami that struck the islands of Thailand. And that was a small one, as tsunamis go. Most of us understand the mechanisms behind tsunamis, mainly because of that horrific event. However, there remains considerable confusion about tidal waves and their source. The one thing most of us unobstructed non-cave-dwellers who hold our heads high can agree on is that tidal waves and tsunamis are not the same thing.
Tsunamis can arise from a number of sources. The most common of these is an earthquake near a coastline or near a submarine drop-off, which causes an underwater landslide. The severity of the slide usually determines the size of the tsunami more than the scale of the earthquake that caused it. This was what led to the devastation in Southeast Asia. Of course, landslides don't always need an earthquake to trigger them. I saw a particularly frightening science documentary showing a giant cleft in one of Hawaii's giant volcanoes (Mauna Loa, I believe, but don't quote me). The tear in the mountain is gradually cutting it in half. Now, keeping in mind that, including what's hidden under the Pacific, Mauna Loa is taller than Mount Everest, the scientists predicted that roughly half of the mountain would sheer away one day, creating a mega tsunami that would annihilate much of America's West Coast… which happens to be where I reside, which is what made the show so scary.
Another source of tsunamis-one that we will hopefully never experience-is one generated by the impact of an asteroid or comet. Did you see the movie Deep Impact? Probably not. Most people were preoccupied with the more popular but juvenile movie Armageddon, which came out about the same time and was about essentially the same thing. Such an ocean impact need not be what they call an "extinction event" in order to generate a destructive tsunami.
Travelling at hundreds of miles per hour in the deep ocean, tsunamis remain quite small until they enter shallower water, where the up-sloping sea floor forces the wave's energy upward, slowing the wave and making it considerably taller.
Tidal waves are a completely different phenomenon. They do not travel at great speeds in the open ocean; earthquakes, sea-slides or meteoric impacts do not spawn them. The name says it all: tidal forces create tidal waves. Such events are rare, often occurring annually in specific areas when the gravitational forces of the moon and the sun combine in just the right way that it draws water into a channel, river, harbor or some other inlet in much greater abundance than a normal tide, and much more quickly. Tidal waves are generally rather predictable, therefore.
One thing holds true for both tidal waves and tsunamis: the beach is not a great place to be when either occurs. You can avoid tidal waves easily enough, but if you happen to be near the shore when an earthquake hits, or if a tsunami alert sounds (so far, this only happens in Hawaii in regards to the United States), take it seriously and get away from the beach. Seek high ground immediately; if none is available, get into a building two or preferably more stories in height and get upstairs in a hurry. A tsunami will gut out the bottom floor of any building, taking people right along with it.
A tornado is a violently rotating column of air extending from the base of a thunderstorm to the ground. Tornadoes cause damage through this very strong winds and debris carried by those winds. A typical tornado lasts only a few minutes, though duration of over an hour do occur.
A tsunami is a larger wave usually triggered by an earthquake or landslide. Tsunamis are most common in the ocean, but occasionally occur in lakes. They cause damage though the force of water rushing onto land. Tsunamis can strike across large ocean basins, though it takes hours for them to travel such distances. Unlike tornadoes, the damage from tsunamis is limited to coastal regions.
There is not any difference between tidal waves and tsunamis, except for that cyclones are high waves accompanied with heavy rain wheras tsunamis are only waves.
Both tornadoes and tsunamis are violent natural disasters that can occur suddenly and with little warning and can cause catastrophic damage. Other than that they are very different phenomena.
Tornadoes, hurricanes, floods, volcanic eruptions, earthquakes, tsunamis, mudslides and wildfires are different types of natural disasters.
They are both natural disasters that can be very destructive and strike quickly. Other than that they are very different.
they are all natural disaters any thing noy human caused is natural
Yes there is. I know 2 natural disasters that starts with 't.' They are 'Tornadoes' and 'Tsunamis.'
a rouge wave is a wave in the ocean, and a tsunamis is a a wave made near a coast.
Generally not. Tsunamis cause destruction along much larger areas than tornadoes do. However tornadoes are significantly more common
Tornadoes and tsunamis are two very different types of weather events. Tornadoes form when two air masses collide. Tsunamis are caused by movement along the ocean floor.
Both tornadoes and tsunamis are violent natural disasters that can occur suddenly and with little warning and can cause catastrophic damage. Other than that they are very different phenomena.
No. Tsunamis and tornadoes are completely unrelated phenomena.
No. The movement of Earth's plates can cause earthquakes and tsunamis but is completely unrelated tornadoes. Tornadoes are produced by severe thunderstorms.
· Tornadoes · Tsunamis
Earthquakes, tsunamis, hurricanes, and tornadoes are all severe. It just depends on how strong they are and where they occur.
Tornadoes, hurricanes, floods, volcanic eruptions, earthquakes, tsunamis, mudslides and wildfires are different types of natural disasters.
earth quakes, volcanoes, tornadoes, tsunamis, hurricanes, etc.
Yes. The United States alone gets more than 1,000 tornadoes in an average year while worldwide there are only a few dozen hurricanes and even fewer tsunamis.
They are both natural disasters that can be very destructive and strike quickly. Other than that they are very different.