Meteotsunami
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
City | Country | Max Height (m) |
---|---|---|
Nagasaki Bay | Japan | 4.8 |
Pohang Harbour | Korea | 0.8 |
Longkou Harbour | China | 3 |
Ciutadella Harbour | Spain | 4 |
Gulf of Trieste | Italy | 1.5 |
West Sicily | Italy | 1.5 |
Malta | Malta | 1 |
Stari Grad | Croatia | 2.5 |
A meteotsunami is a tsunami-like wave phenomenon of meteorological origin. Tsunamis and meteotsunamis propagate in the water in the same way and have the same coastal dynamics. In other words, for an observer on the coast where it strikes the two types would look the same. The difference is in their source only. One definition of a meteotsunami is as an atmospherically generated large amplitude seiche oscillation.
The principal source of these tsunami-like ocean waves are travelling air pressure disturbances, including those associated with atmospheric gravity waves, roll clouds, pressure jumps, frontal passages, and squalls, which normally generate barotropic ocean waves in the open ocean and amplify them near the coast through specific resonance mechanisms. In contrast to ‘ordinary’ impulse-type tsunami sources, a travelling atmospheric disturbance normally interacts with the ocean over a limited period of time (from several minutes to several hours).
These types of waves are common all over the world and are better known by their local names: Rissaga (Spain), Milghuba (Malta), Marrubio (Italy), Abiki (Japan).
[edit] External links
- Croatian Institute for Oceanography presentation on meteotsunamisPDF
- Photos of the Rissaga in Spain (Ciutadella) 06-15-2006