Charles Richter
Charles Francis Richter was an American seismologist and physicist. Richter is most famous as the creator of the Richter magnitude scale, which, until the development of the moment magnitude scale in 1979, quantified the size of earthquakes.
Richter was born in Overpeck, Ohio and moved to Los Angeles as a child.
Seismology is the study of earthquakes.
Tsunami
A tsunami is a series of water waves that is caused by the displacement of a large volume of a body of water, such as an ocean. The original Japanese term literally translates as harbour wave. Tsunamis are a frequent occurrence in Japan; approximately 195 events have been recorded.
Before a Tsunami
Manage an escape plan with your family where to go and what to do.
During a Tsunami
Go to your escape exit in your home and go where you planned.
After a Tsunami
Wait until an official person e.g. Civil defence tells you to go back to your home.
Tsunamis can hit low-lying coastal areas anywhere in NZ
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all around the coast. most of the major citys apart from hamilton.
The best answer to your question will be at teara.org, or igns.org, both of whom maintain such a database. Without knowing which tsunami you refer to, the question is unanswerable.
New Zealand has been hit by a number of tsunamis through the years, as it is vulnerable to tsunamis generated along the Pacific Rim, where much seismic activity occurs. Some examples include:On 22-23 May 1960 - a tsunami from Chile produced a 5.5 m tsunami in Lyttelton Harbour,and affected other coastal harbours such as GisborneIn August 1868, seismic activity in Chile created a tsunami that reached as high as 8 m in parts of the east coast - again, Lyttelton was most affectedOn 17-18 July 1998, a destructive tsunami that hit northern Papua New Guinea generated enough force to register at Lyttelton and other areas of the Canterbury coast.There have been other small tsunamis that have hit New Zealand - the ones described above are just a small selection. Sources suggest New Zealand has experienced about 10 tsunamis higher than 5m since 1840
The major hazard would be fault lines. New Zealand is situated over at least one major fault line which means earthquakes are frequent in some areas.
New Zealand and Australia have distinct currencies. Australia has the Australian Dollar and New Zealand has the New Zealand Dollar. They are not interchangeable or usable in both countries and they have differing values.
One or two metres, if there's big tsunami Blenheim isn't going to last very long...
The last tsunami before Japan was in New Zealand.
New Zealand
No
expected a few hours after the original tsunami.
New Zealand and Australia.
No, because Blenheim, New Zealand is to far from the shoreline
no darwin is not at risk from a tsunami
Tsunamis can hit low-lying coastal areas anywhere. A tsunami warning has just been issued for new zealand 30/07/09
The best answer to your question will be at teara.org, or igns.org, both of whom maintain such a database. Without knowing which tsunami you refer to, the question is unanswerable.
No. land based earthquakes seldom cause tsunami. a quake under the ocean is much more likely to do so.
New Zealand has been hit by a number of tsunamis through the years, as it is vulnerable to tsunamis generated along the Pacific Rim, where much seismic activity occurs. Some examples include:On 22-23 May 1960 - a tsunami from Chile produced a 5.5 m tsunami in Lyttelton Harbour,and affected other coastal harbours such as GisborneIn August 1868, seismic activity in Chile created a tsunami that reached as high as 8 m in parts of the east coast - again, Lyttelton was most affectedOn 17-18 July 1998, a destructive tsunami that hit northern Papua New Guinea generated enough force to register at Lyttelton and other areas of the Canterbury coast.There have been other small tsunamis that have hit New Zealand - the ones described above are just a small selection. Sources suggest New Zealand has experienced about 10 tsunamis higher than 5m since 1840
Don't be so ridiculous!