Medicine & TechnologyGeologists explain why minor earthquakes could produce relatively large tsunamis. Learn more about how the calamity is formed, and what regions are likely to experience the phenomenon.
The largest earthquake in history triggered a tsunami that reached 5,000 miles across the other side of the planet. Read the article to learn the details.
The wave documented in 2020 has recently been confirmed for being proportionately the most extreme rogue wave ever reported, a record-breaking occurrence.
A new study harnessed contributing evidence of the Thera-Santorini volcanic eruption in the Mediterranean. Major finding states that a series of tsunamis hit the coasts surrounding the Aegean Sea after the explosions 3,600 years ago.
A recent study shows how global warming and rising sea levels would alter predictions for the height and damage of tsunamis as early as 50-70 years from now.
A new seismic hazard source was discovered by researchers which they consider as geologic evidence for the unusually large earthquakes and tsunamis occurring in Tokyo.
A news geophysical research suggests that megaripples from the space-rock dino-killer were from big tidal waves that crashed to prehistoric North America.
A tsunami, as we know it, is often caused by earthquakes that occur under the ocean. However, there are other factors and events that could cause this destructive tidal wave.
With only a third of a slope along one flank of a fjord in Prince William Sound is supported by ice, an earthquake, prolonged heavy rain, and heat wave will most likely trigger a landslide.
Scientists say the discovery of19 enormous ancient underwater landslides that accumulated over 2.25 million years point out that the tsunami might happen soon, and those mitigation strategies should be alerted. Click the link above to read more.