- A
meteotsunami or
meteorological tsunami is a tsunami-like sea wave of
meteorological origin.
Meteotsunamis are
generated when
rapid changes in barometric...
- and
there have only been two
confirmed cases in
recorded history.
Meteotsunamis (displacements due to
atmospheric pressure,
rather than
seismic shock)...
-
examples of
tsunamis affecting the
British Isles refer to
landslide and
meteotsunamis,
predominantly and less to earthquake-induced waves. The destruction...
- near the ocean.
Oceans portal Wind wave
Rogue wave
Tsunami Megatsunami Meteotsunami Miller,
Craig (22
October 2013). "What
Makes 'Sneaker Waves' so Sneaky...
- sea not
accompanied by
black clouds Resonance –
Physical characteristic of
oscillating systems Meteotsunami – Tsunami-like wave of
meteorological origin...
-
coast of the Gulf of
Mexico and
Caribbean Sea. The shockwave-triggered
meteotsunami had a
maximum wave
height of 0.377 m (1 ft 2.8 in).
Minor tsunamis were...
-
central New
Zealand coast,
evidence that the
eruption probably caused meteotsunamis locally, and much more
widespread waves may have been
generated (like...
- the 1961
sinking of the Albatross.
Oceans portal Rogue wave
Microburst Meteotsunami USA Today: "Answers: Oceans, waves, tides."
Retrieved March 21, 2007...
- parts. In the same year (2022),
Tanaka has used
muography to
measure meteotsunamis,
another hazard linked to cyclones. Tanaka's
research group together...
-
portal Oceans portal Coastal flooding Ishiguro Storm Surge Computer Meteotsunami Rogue wave Tsunami-proof
building "Storm
Surge Overview". nhc.noaa.gov...