None. A tsunami is not wind-related. It is a massive surge of water.
A tsunami is not a wind-related event, so the wind could be going any speed.
No. A tsunami is a massive surge of water. Wind is not involved at all.
DEFINITELY!!! But the strength changes depending on the Tsunami.
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.
You can't create a tsunami, tsunamis are from natural occurances. Caused by weather etc.
No Tsunamis are not formed by wind events
A tsunami can reach heights of over 100 feet when it makes landfall, depending on factors such as the size and strength of the tsunami and the shape of the coastline.
The tsunami doesn't have a rating of strength like the earthquakes do but their were 20 to maybe30 foot waves racing in and through Japan
the Richter scale
The source of energy for ocean waves is primarily wind. Wind blowing across the surface of the ocean transfers its energy to the water, creating waves. The size and strength of the waves depend on factors such as wind speed, duration, and the distance over which the wind blows.
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.