The 2004 Boxing Day tsunami traveled varying distances inland across different areas of Indonesia, with some locations experiencing inundation up to 5 kilometers (about 3 miles) from the coastline. In particular, areas like Aceh were severely affected, with the tsunami reaching as far as 10 kilometers (approximately 6 miles) inland in certain regions. The extent of the inundation was influenced by local topography and coastal features.
The Boxing Day tsunami traveled inland up to 2.5 miles in some areas, with the majority of its impact occurring within 1 mile of the coast.
2 miles
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It depends on how strong it is and if there are any mountains blocking sea breezes (sea breeze don't usually blow higher than 600m above sea level). If you had a 7 knot breeze it would only travel around 50km inland. If you had a 14 knot breeze it would travel around 100km inland. If you had a 21 knot breeze it would travel up to 150km inland (quite unlikely though as sea breezes aren't that strong). But on a normal sea breeze blowing day it would travel about 75km inland.
Across the world twice
There are none near it. It is inland. You have to travel a couple of hours to get to some.
The tsunami can flood as fast as a commercial jet plane.
Travel via the quieter inland highways.
No, inland states typically do not experience hurricanes since they are not near the coast where hurricanes form and make landfall. Inland states may experience remnants of hurricanes in the form of heavy rain and strong winds after the hurricane has weakened and moved inland.
Yves Fougerat has written: 'Le chemin qui marche' -- subject(s): History, Canals, Inland water transportation, Description and travel, Inland navigation
It depends on the area in which you live in. Unless you are willing to travel hundreds to thousands of kilometers to visit a boxing gym, it is hard for me to pinpoint a location without knowing anything.
Mega-tsunamis - tsunamis that are extraordinarily huge - are said to be able to travel as far as 25 kilometers inland.More tsunami tidbits from our users:Landforms slow them down considerably. The distance traveled inland is directly related to the change in elevation.