A puzzling tsunami entered Japanese history in January 1700. Samurai, merchants, and villagers wrote of minor flooding and damage. Some noted having felt no earthquake; they wondered what had set off the waves but had no way of knowing that the tsunami was spawned during an earthquake along the coast of northwestern North America. This orphan tsunami would not be linked to its parent earthquake until the mid-twentieth century, through an extraordinary series of discoveries in both North America and Japan.
The Orphan Tsunami of 1700, now in its second edition, tells this scientific detective story through its North American and Japanese clues. The story underpins many of today’s precautions against earthquake and tsunami hazards in the Cascadia region of northwestern North America. The Japanese tsunami of March 2011 called attention to these hazards as a mirror image of the transpacific waves of January 1700.
Hear Brian Atwater on NPR with Renee Montagne http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?story Id=4629401
Replaced by ISBN 9780295998084
Daftar Isi
Introduction
1. Unearthed earthquakes
2. The orphan tsunami
–Kuwagasaki
–Tsugaruishi
–Otsuchi
–Nakaminato
–Miho
–Tanabe
3. The orphan’s parent
Acknowledgments
Authors
References
Index
Tentang Penulis
Brian F. Atwater, Musumi-Rokkaku Satoko, Satake Kenji, Tsuji Yoshinobu, Ueda Kazue, and David K. Yamaguchi pooled their backgrounds in geology, geophysics, forestry, history, and language.