A tsunami is a geologic event that is not affected by weather. The humidity could be anything.
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The 2011 Japan tsunami affected around 20,000 people, leading to significant loss of lives, infrastructure damage, and displacement of residents in the affected areas. The aftermath of the disaster prompted large-scale humanitarian efforts and reconstruction projects to help those impacted.
Over 230,000 people were killed by the 2004 Indonesian tsunami, with millions more affected by displacement, injuries, and loss of livelihoods.
No, the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami did not hit Molokai in Hawaii. Molokai is located in the central Pacific Ocean and was not affected by the tsunami.
Coastal fishermen could be saved from a tsunami by taking their boats out to sea. A tsunami does not become particularly tall until lit reaches the shallow water near shore.
how the natural resources are affected by the tsunami
The people who were affected in the Japanese tsunami was the prime minister because its his country and of course the people who was trapped in the tsunami.
The disadvantages of a tsunami are mainly:sweeping and destruction of homes and buildingskilling people in the direction of and in areas close to tsunamidrowning of fishermen during the tsunamibreaking down of the electric grid and spread of darknesssweeping of cars and vehicles in the areas affected by tsunamispoiling and destruction of crops, plants, trees, and domestic animals
how many people were affected
The Japanese
none, just eat lots of poo =)
It is unknown what places will be affected by the next mega tsunami.
A tsunami is a geologic event that is not affected by weather. The humidity could be anything.
Anyone can; even people continents away can be affected by really strong earthquakes. Japan had an earthquake and a tsunami that caused a tsunami in Hawaii.
Japan is a country that is most affected by them
The word tsunami means "harbor wave" in Japanese. It refers to the fact that when a tsunami occurred sailors and fishermen at sea would not notice anything unusual, but would find coastal communities devastated when they returned to port.