probably not
Tsunamis bring large amount of water. It disrupts water cycle.
No. Tsunamis are classified as huge tidal waves. Tsunamis cause floods when the waves hit the shore and the water rushes inland.
Tsunamis are typically triggered by underwater earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, or underwater landslides. When these events occur, they displace a large volume of water, creating a series of powerful waves that can travel across the ocean at high speeds. As the waves approach shallow coastal areas, they slow down and their energy is concentrated, resulting in a devastating surge of water onto land.
Yes, a tsunami can lose power over time as it travels across the ocean due to factors such as friction with the ocean floor, energy dispersion, and interactions with land masses. However, tsunamis can still be destructive even if they lose some power before reaching the shore.
yes it can the ultrasound moves under the sea and makes an invisible wave under the sea and basically crashes into the tsunami and trips it up which means it breaks to early before it hits the land
You get tsunamis from one in three things volcanic eruption Earthquake Land slides, The most common is a earthquake
A part that has land
No, Frogs have no ability to sense changing weather or water patterns, in fact no known land animal can sense a tsunami before it occurs.
A tsunami is a wave that is usally caused by either an undersea earthquake or by a land slip into the sea. Tsunamis were once called tidal waves.
Big wave moving fast. People drowned. Buildings knocked down. Crops ruined.
well first of all, people are going to get hit by tsunamis but also buildings are likely to get detroyed too depending on how high and how strong was it. a tsunamis occur when the ocean gets desturbed( example:earthquake-anything that shakes the land ). tsunamis are no laughing matter.
It destroys our land and kills millions of lifes
What causes the tsunami is an earthquake under ground and it blows the water to land
Tsunamis trevel about more then one miles
Tsunamis bring large amount of water. It disrupts water cycle.
No. They happen underwater, too. That's how tsunamis form.
The best warning is detecting major offshore earthquakes. These are what trigger tsunamis. The waves build up at sea until they reach land at enormous heights.