NOAA:
A rare tsunami hit the East Coast earlier this month
Storm
systems growing more intense:
A radar image of the storm complex that may have caused the East
Coast tsunami
NPR,
25
June, 2013
The
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration says
a 6-foot wave that hit the East Coast earlier this month was a rare
tsunami.
The
West Coast and Alaska Tsunami Warning Center said the source of the
wave is "complex and under review," but they believe it was
caused by a strong storm and perhaps even the "the slumping at
the continental shelf east of New Jersey."
The
weather service says that Brian Coen, who was spear fishing near
Barnegat Inlet in New Jersey, saw the effect of the tsunami first
hand.
He
told the weather service that he noticed an outgoing tide that lasted
a couple of minutes and exposed rocks that had been submerged. That
was followed by a big six-foot wave.
The
Asbury Park Press, which covers the Jersey coast, talked
to Paul Whitmore, director of the tsunami center.
He
explained the weather system that moved through the area may have
changed the air pressure enough to "generate waves that act just
like tsunamis."
When that happens, the wave is called a
"meteotsunami" — in other words a tsunami caused by
meteorological conditions, not seismic activity.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.