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Panic before the storm (a terribly sad series of three pictures taken as the tsunami approaches)
Sydney Morning Herald ^ | 12/30/04

Posted on 12/30/2004 7:06:00 AM PST by dead

Tourists run for their lives as the first of six tsunamis starts to roll towards Hat Rai
Lay Beach, near Krabi in southern Thailand. One woman runs towards the waves.
Photo: AFP




The woman continues to run as the wave advances.
Photo: AFP




With the waves engulfing boats, the woman makes contact with her group. It is not known if they survived.
Photo: AFP


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: 500mph; aceh; andaman; bangladesh; beach; burma; death; drown; earthwuake; engulf; flood; hatraylai; india; inundate; jetspeed; kill; krabi; malaysia; maldives; nicobar; ocean; penang; phiphi; phuket; sea; seychelles; shoreline; somalia; speed; srilanka; suckedunder; sumatraquake; survive; tanzania; thailand; tidalwaves; tourists; tsunami; washedaway; wavesofdeath; whirlpool
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To: two23

Top photo shows normal shoreline line. 2nd photo shows the receded shoreline and 3rd is one of the return surges.


121 posted on 12/30/2004 8:04:59 AM PST by two23
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To: Lazamataz

Might work for normal waves.

Doubt it would work here.

I've never been in a tsunami situation but I've used that tactic with succes in a lot of high surf as well as strong currents. I think those peoples best hope would have been to flatten themselves to the bottom. The current will be weakest near the bottom so their only hope is to try. In so doing, they will avoid being initially swept from their feet, tumbled and rolled. They then propel themselves to the surface where they either go with the flow or repeat the bottom clinging process.

My guess is that most of the fatalities were due to people being pummeled against hard objects, trapped by debris and or killed by debris. In such case, if those people on the beach could have maintained control and survived the initial impact, they would have been ok until the flow carried them onto flooded land areas. Then their danger would have increased dramatically.

122 posted on 12/30/2004 8:05:03 AM PST by fso301
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To: Lazamataz
I was envisioning these 50 feet walls of water....

The reports I read said they were thirty feet or more. They get bigger as the depth gets shallower. It may only be six feet (I'd say bigger,however) in the first picture and still raise to 30 feet as it came onshore.

123 posted on 12/30/2004 8:06:38 AM PST by Aeronaut (Merry CHRISTmas. (Member of Christians for inclusion in Christmas))
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To: eyedigress; Travis McGee
Still haven't figured out how Bangladesh escaped damage. It appears that the epicenter was a few miles SE of the northern tip of Sumatra, thus possibly sparing land to the north and east of Sumatra, but both the Andaman & Nicobar islands (north) and Thailand (NE) were hit hard.

The waves radiate outward in all directions from the disturbance and can propagate across entire ocean basins.

124 posted on 12/30/2004 8:09:57 AM PST by Ready4Freddy (Carpe Sharpei !)
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To: Travis McGee
Each open ocean tsunami wave has a height from trough to crest of a few meters at most, and a period of a mile or more, traveling at 500-600 mph.

I imagine that would demolish any boats/ships in its path...

125 posted on 12/30/2004 8:10:20 AM PST by Future Snake Eater ("Stupid grandma leaver-outers!"--Tom Servo)
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To: Dark Wing

ping


126 posted on 12/30/2004 8:10:55 AM PST by Thud
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To: Aeronaut

One way to estimate the height is to take the guy's height in the 3rd pix, assume he is 6 feet, and compare that length to the wave. agreed that the wave is further away and therefore smaller in the picture, it still is 2.5 times the height of the man. That makes the waves AT LEAST 15 feet, and I'm betting double that.


127 posted on 12/30/2004 8:20:25 AM PST by Lokibob (All typos and spelling errors are mine and copyrighted!!!!)
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To: dead

What kind of logic says when the water runs out it is never coming back??


128 posted on 12/30/2004 8:23:55 AM PST by shellshocked
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To: Thud; Travis McGee

The shock wave at sea, which does not displace water, moves at 500mph

****


IOW, the water molecules do not move across the 1000s of miles of ocean. What reaches land is like the last ball in the desk toy of suspended silver balls swinging out when the first ball is made to hit the second ball. Balls 2,3,4,5 and 6 remain immobile. But ball #7 (the end one) swings high, since there is no ball #8 to take the transfer of energy.

Even the waves in these photos, that people are saying do not appear high, have not reached their max height as there is still a lot of water under the sea level.

Our brains can not really compute a picture for which we have no reference, so we assume that these waves are the 6-10ft high ones that we know from our beach experiences.

Believe me those yachties on that beach knew that they were looking at something they had never seen before. - One solid wave from horizon to horizon. Hardly anyone has ever seen that.


129 posted on 12/30/2004 8:31:12 AM PST by maica (I give thanks for all brave Americans who bring hope of freedom to people around the world.)
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To: Ready4Freddy

I do not know the topography of the ocean floor, but I understand that places such as Diego Garcia were protected by very deep sea trenches which absorbed the energy in deep water.
Also areas with sharp slopes near the coast, or if there are reefs would help greatly.


130 posted on 12/30/2004 8:31:42 AM PST by eyedigress
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To: dead

Look at the top of the mast in each picture, then the mountain is gone in the last, I think that is the wave , not a mountain.


131 posted on 12/30/2004 8:34:41 AM PST by big bad easter bunny (Whats more to say?)
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To: Ghost of Philip Marlowe
Tsunamis are not usually very high, but the swell can be as far as a mile deep. A half mile of water 10 feet high traveling at a couple hundred miles an hour equals extreme force and a lot of water flooding in.

Good description. So many people don't understand how these waves are different from the big waves on the North Shore of Oahu, for example.

132 posted on 12/30/2004 8:40:44 AM PST by Diverdogz
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To: MikeinIraq

minus tide. Good clammin.


133 posted on 12/30/2004 8:43:54 AM PST by showme_the_Glory (No more rhyming, and I mean it! ..Anybody got a peanut.....)
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To: Go Gordon

:) cute...


134 posted on 12/30/2004 8:45:22 AM PST by Hand em their arse
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To: Go Gordon

would it have been better if i said "trying to put myself in her bikini"?


135 posted on 12/30/2004 8:46:33 AM PST by Hand em their arse
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To: redhead

The other thing I have noticed about these waves is the incredible mass of water that is involved in the tesunami. It's not just some "wave". What we're seeing here is the front of a hydraulic jump with incredible force and speed.

Those multiple waves involve an increase in height like a staircase. That's why the total increase in the water level was over five meters.


136 posted on 12/30/2004 8:47:08 AM PST by gortklattu (As the preacher in Blazing Saddles said "You're on your own.")
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To: MikeinIraq

The waves move at 500 mph. And they are not 'breakers' as we have them here in LA, but rather huge, long surges where the water just rises and rises. Water is SO STRONG.


137 posted on 12/30/2004 8:47:43 AM PST by bboop
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To: painter

see my above post...


138 posted on 12/30/2004 8:48:35 AM PST by gortklattu (As the preacher in Blazing Saddles said "You're on your own.")
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To: KoRn
You would be too late if you see the sea leaving the shore. That's the sign that the big one will come immediately afterwards.

I am still amazed that there were no radio and TV warnings from the governments of the countries that were hardest hit. They knew about the Sumatran earthquake and the tsunami danger, but did not warn the people in coastal areas so as "not to upset the tourist economy." Last night it was alleged that the Australian government told all of their embassies in the region that a tsunami might occur, but the ambassadors were told not to pass this word on to the local governments. Could this be true? If so, those government people should be removed for gross incompetence and possible prosecution. With all of the wondrous communication devices we have, they seemed to have failed, thanks to the stupidity of government people.

139 posted on 12/30/2004 8:51:18 AM PST by Paulus Invictus
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To: libravoter

Ping that video that was taken at 12:04

Man, what a wave. I would have been running sooner than those people!!!


140 posted on 12/30/2004 8:51:36 AM PST by gortklattu (As the preacher in Blazing Saddles said "You're on your own.")
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