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  5. Page 13
Home»Posts tagged with»tsunami (Page 13)

Hawaii, Vulnerable to Tsunamis, Prepares for the Worst

By Mike O'Sullivan|VOA News on Feb 6, 2015   Featured, National  

Hawaii, Vulnerable to Tsunamis, Prepares for the Worst

HONOLULU—The reality of rising sea levels caused by climate change means many coastal communities and island nations are vulnerable to tsunamis. The U.S. island state of Hawaii is vulnerable to tsunamis and is in the forefront of preparations for a tidal wave.  But the devastating 2011 earthquake and tsunami in Japan led Hawaii officials to […]

Digging up Augustine’s Top-Heavy Legacy

By Ned Rozell | Geophysical Institute on Jan 30, 2015   Featured, The Arctic and Alaska Science  

Digging up Augustine’s Top-Heavy Legacy

Augustine Volcano sits alone, a 4,000-foot pyramid on its own island in Cook Inlet. Like many volcanoes, it has a tendency to become top heavy. When gravity acts on Augustine’s oversteepened dome, rockslides spill into the ocean. A scientist recently found new evidence for an Augustine-generated tsunami from a time when Egyptian pharaohs built their […]

The Demise of Scotch Cap Lighthouse

By Ned Rozell | Geophysical Institute on Jan 16, 2015   Featured, The Arctic and Alaska Science  

The Demise of Scotch Cap Lighthouse

In spring of 1946, five men stationed at the Scotch Cap lighthouse had reasons to be happy. World War II was over. They had survived. Their lonely Coast Guard assignment on Unimak Island would be over in a few months. But the lighthouse tenders would never return to their homes in the Lower 48. In […]

1946 Tsunami Survivor Shares her Story

By Ned Rozell | Geophysical Institute on Jan 5, 2015   Featured, General News  

1946 Tsunami Survivor Shares her Story

On April 1, 1946, the sea floor ruptured just south of Unimak Island in the Aleutian Islands. Seawater displaced by the giant earthquake sent a 100-foot wave into the Scotch Cape lighthouse on Unimak, destroying the concrete structure and killing the five men inside. They never knew what hit them in the 2 a.m. darkness. […]

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