Experts say the West Coast could experience a calamity similar to the
one they have been watching unfold half a world away.
"People need to know it could happen," said geologist Brian Atwater
of the U.S. Geological Survey (news
-
web sites).
Scientists say grinding geologic circumstances similar to those in
Sumatra also exist just off the Pacific Northwest coast. They are a
loaded gun that could trigger a tsunami that could hit Northern
California, Washington, Oregon and British Columbia in minutes too
fast for the nation's deep-sea tsunami warning system to help.
In fact, Atwater said there was a 9.0 earthquake under the Pacific
more than 300 years ago that had devastating consequences. He and other
scientists last year reported finding evidence of severe flooding in the
Puget Sound area in 1700, including trees that stopped growing after
"taking a bath in rising tide waters."
The danger rests just 50 miles off the West Coast in a 680-mile
undersea fault known as the Cascadia subduction zone that behaves much
like one that ruptured off Sumatra. The 1700 quake occurred along the
Cascadia fault.
Scientists say a giant rupture along the fault would cause the sea
floor to bounce 20 feet or more, setting off powerful ocean waves
relatively close to shore. The first waves could hit coastal communities
in 30 minutes or less, according to computer models.
Seattle; Vancouver, British Columbia; and other big cities in the
region probably would be relatively protected from deadly flooding
because of their inland locations. But other, smaller communities could
be devastated.
And while buildings in the United States are far more solid than the
shacks and huts that were obliterated in some of Asia's poor villages,
few structures could withstand nearby tremors as powerful as those that
occurred Sunday in Sumatra.
Moreover, such a quake would be way too close to shore for the
nation's network of deep-sea wave gauges to be of any help.
Even in the case of quakes happening farther out in the Pacific or in
Alaska, the U.S. warning system might not be adequate.
The network which consists of six deep-sea instruments in Alaska,
Washington, Oregon and Hawaii and near the equator off the coast of Peru
is thin and scattered, and at least two of the gauges in Alaska are
not even reporting daily wave readings. Also, predicting where a tsunami
is likely to come ashore cannot be done with the kind of precision seen
in hurricane forecasts.
Eddie N. Bernard, who directs the network for the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration, said the six sensors are the "bare
minimum" for adequate warning. He said there are plans to expand the
system to 20 sensors in the next five years, including 10 gauges for the
seismically active Aleutian Islands.
Whether the continental United States is vulnerable to tsunamis from
Asian earthquakes is another question. Hawaii and parts of Alaska
certainly are exposed, but whether earthquake fault lines in Japan and
Southeast Asia are oriented in the right directions to send tsunamis all
they way to the Lower 48 states is debatable.
As for the Atlantic Coast, a tsunami is considered extremely
unlikely.
Some computer models suggest East Coast cities are vulnerable to a
large tsunami if there were a huge volcanic eruption and landslide in
the Canary Islands, off northwest Africa. But other researchers say such
an event would happen only once in 10,000 years, and such a disruption
is unlikely to occur all at once.