NZ: Risk of bigger tsunamis
A review of the risk posed by tsunami has found parts of New Zealand could be struck by waves 50% bigger than previously thought. It also says they could strike before official warnings were issued.
30 September, 2013
The
GNS review found a powerful earthquake on one of those fault lines
could result in a 15m high tsunami striking Northland and Great
Barrier Island, along with parts of the East Coast of the North
Island and Wairarapa.
The
wave could surge more than 30m above sea level on steep parts of the
coast, a height comparable to the 2011 Japan tsunami.
The
agency also included Southland and the West Coast as areas where
fault lines could produce much larger earthquakes than previously
thought.
Tsunami warnings could be too late
On
top of that, a natural hazards researcher at GNS Science, Graham
Leonard, says the wave could arrive less than an hour after the
earthquake which generated it, and before official warnings could be
broadcast.
Dr
Leonard says that means people need to run for high ground as soon as
they feel a strong quake.
People
living on the coast need to know they should run for high ground if
they feel a quake strong enough that they cannot stand, or which
lasts for more than a minute.
Dr
Leonard also says it's important people stay out of evacuation zones
until they get the all clear from Civil Defence.
Civil
Defence says it plans to discuss the findings with local councils and
reinforce messages about the risk of tsunami to the public.
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