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Quake and Tsunami Devastate South Asia

pfb writes "From reuters, 'The world's fifth-largest quake in a century has hit southern Asia, triggering a speeding tsunami that crashed into Sri Lanka and India, drowning hundreds, and swamping tourist islands in Thailand and the Maldives.'"

19 of 744 comments (clear)

  1. Geez.... by bugbeak · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ...set off by the 8.9 magnitude earthquake...

    Windows in JAKARTA, Indonesia, were rattling, and some even broke. And that is a 2-3 hour flight away from the epicenter!

  2. Re:Arthur C. Clarke? by mOoZik · · Score: 5, Informative

    Yes, he lives in Colombo. As you can see from the picture, he is on the coast. I hope he is all right. :(

  3. Re:This is Geek news? by s3pHiRoTh · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I guess the news here are supposed to be stuff that matters. This matters.

  4. Brother vacationing Thailand... by RefuX · · Score: 5, Informative

    Yeah my brother and wife (John and Brigette) are currently in Thailand and were planning to dive today... unfortunatly I have no idea where in Thailand they are....

    He hasn't cotacted me yet, but even if he wanted to I doubt he could.

    Fingers crossed!

    p.s. The British Foreign office have set up an emergency help line: 0207 008 0000, I havn't been able to get through yet, its really busy.

    1. Re:Brother vacationing Thailand... by RefuX · · Score: 5, Informative

      Well just got off the phone with Bridget's folks.
      It was a very close call, Bridget got up in the morning, looked out of the window and saw it coming.
      John and Briget started running
      On the way they overtook one person, he was unable to keep up.
      Some others who they were running with showed them the way to safety, the one guy they overtook, heh didn't make it...
      John's feet got badly cut up and they lost alot of their items.

  5. Not unpredictable, but probably unavoidable. by Altima(BoB) · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Actually only the preceeding earthquake is unpredictable. When you know where the epicenter of the earthquake is and the topography and makeup of the ocean floor, you can see where the resulting tsunamis (if any are created) will hit hardest.

    Unfortunately, you don't have much time between the quake and the tsunami hitting. I hear if Canary Island (The one ready to fall into the sea and wipe out the east coast) would cause a tsunami that could travel across the Atlantic Ocean in 45 minutes, and I read on the BBC that this most recent tsunami was going 2,000km/h, which seems to be roughly the same speed. Mind boggling though.

    Also hurting any warning effort is how do you get a mass warning out to places like Sri Lanka? There's no mass media infrastructure and only the minimum of transport infrastructure. I suppose part of this tragedy is how unavoidable it was in these nations' current states. Only Japan has invested any significant amount of money in Tsunami warning systems.

    --
    Yup...
  6. 6300 dead at 15:13 GMT by fbjon · · Score: 5, Informative
    And it was around 3200 just a few hours ago. Here's the Reuters article. Watching BBC world, it appears that some northern areas of Sumatra still can't be reached, and the situation there is unknown. Here's a map of the affected area.

    It seems that a displacement in the sea bottom ocurred, moving 10-30 metres up along a rupture of 1000 km, causing a wave of hundreds of cubic kilometres of ocean water.

    --
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  7. Latest News ... by sunsrin · · Score: 5, Informative

    You can find the latest news at http://news.google.co.in (The Indian Version of Google News )

  8. Full Moon by Shag · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Of course, this all happening at full moon will probably fuel the people who study whether the gravitational pull of the sun and moon impacts the occurrence of earthquakes like it does tides.

    --
    Village idiot in some extremely smart villages.
  9. Energy release by SteveAstro · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Can anyone put some kind of comparision between the energy release here and the energy release of the prospective planet impactor 2004MN4 ? It would help to put things into scale, if not perspective.

    If MN4 were to hit, estimated release is 450-2000 MT of TNT, so how does a Richter 8.9 compare.

    Steve

    1. Re:Energy release by Snarfangel · · Score: 5, Informative

      A 9.0 earthquake would release the equivalent of 1,800 Megatons, so it would be in the same ballpark.

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  10. From the shores of Chennai India by ashwinds · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I live quiet close to the shore in Besant Nagar- we got off easy - but it was awesome (not as in exciting but leave your mouth open gaping awesome) to see the sea swell up and eat up the shoreline. I was just driving past and saw a boat go up and down about 20-30 feet from the road!! I parked the car, grabbed the camera - but by then the sea had receded - but that was enough to cause serious damage to the hutments close to the sea. We had mild tremor to start the day - barely noticeable at around 6.30 AM - i looked up the internet and found Tibet post of USGS registering a 8.9 quake at Sumatra -looking at the map I thought to myself - all thats in the line between Sumatra and Chennai is the sea (and of course teeny weeny Andaman). Went out for Breakfast and on my return - this. Its unforgettable and cannot be described. Most of India's coast is devastated - I hear Sri Lanka, Maldives etc are pretty bad too. The Quake here was nothing - a mild shake at best - but the Tsunami that followed was something else Apologies for the verbose post - but I am struggling for words to tell what happened.

  11. Re:Arthur C. Clarke? by mangu · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I hope he is all right


    Me too, I hope he is all right, along with the several hundred millions of other people who live in that region.

  12. Re:How long until we blame America by Dante+Shamest · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I know it is an unpopular view and I will be immediately marked down for saying so, but I believe this is an act of a higher power.

    Yeah. Mother Nature.


    Punishment for non believers and 9/11 I think?

    Please. If you really believe that God's responsible, then you believe in a sick God: He punishes people (including innocent children) via tsunamis just because he doesn't have enough fans? I seriously doubt other Christians would share your view.

  13. I live in Coastal South India by EqualSlash · · Score: 5, Informative


    I live in Chennai(Madras),(Capital City of the State Tamil Nadu - the region worst affected by the Tsunami in India ). For us, this is the first time ever something like a Tsunami hits our coast. The earthquake itself was not deadly but the tides alone were responsible for the death of more than 1000 people according to some reports. Since this happened early in the morning and the day being a sunday, not many people were awake at that time. In my city alone almost 100 poor fishermen who live in the huts along the seashore were washed away. Coastal regions in the Southern parts of my state where even more affected - a lot many were drowned in the flash floods. The fact that I was sleeping unaware of the whole thing at that time, less than a kilometre away from the sea, sends a shiver down my spine.
    You can find some pictures here.

  14. Re:How long until we blame America by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Dude, you are fucking nuts. Make a favor to mankind and just shut up, its because people like you that we are heading again to the Dark Ages. People like you spread hate and fear between humans disguised in the form of religion, people like you make war and kill in the name of some kind of god that you never saw or feeled. you represent the worst of mankind

  15. I can't believe the prejudice here by postbigbang · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is an astounding loss of life, and a healthy fraction of the posts are just evil. If this is what slashdot has come to, prejudice, intolerance and ill-will for those that have suffered, I'm outta here. These are your brethren. Mothers and fathers, sisters and brothers, uncles and aunts that have been hit by an unannounced, unpreventable, and unknowable tragedy. I'm appalled.

    --
    ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
  16. Re:Low Early, Tasteless Later by Rob+Carr · · Score: 5, Insightful
    BTW is it just me, or does it seem in poor taste for News outlets like FOX and CNN to focus on possible American casualties when these kind of natural disasters happen?

    For some reason, the human mind categorizes things according to how the object is related to the individual. If something is near, it's far more impactful than if something is far away. If you can see it, it has more impact than if you can't. If you are somehow related to the individual, the event makes a greater impression.

    News organizations know this. By focusing on some aspect that relates to their viewers, they're more likely to draw in the viewer's interest.

    Look at the readers of Slashdot. They immediately related to Arthur C. Clarke living in the area. It's how our brains work.

    As far as numbers, on a cognitive level, we all know that 7000 is larger than 3000 is larger than 10. But our brains don't really grasp numbers over 7 too well. We might have a general feel for 100, and there's some indication that the largest natural human groups wind up around 160 or so. Beyond that, we don't connect to the numbers on a primative level. It's just big numbers.

    As a human, it helps if you understand how your brain works, so that you can compensate.

    Me? I like to snorkel. Reading about the scuba divers that probably got wiped out caught my attention. Through those scuba divers, my brain can now emotionally link to the tragedy. Stupid, but it works.

    You think MS Windows is buggy? Look at the home-grown software your brain's running.

    --
    This sig seemed like a good idea at the time....
  17. 'Inamura no hi' by suikyo · · Score: 5, Informative

    I'm a Japanese, and I feel I heard of the legend, but uncertain.
    So I googled.
    see the full story(Japanese page)

    The story was known as one article of our very old language arts schoolbook of national elementary schools. It was published about from 1937 to 1947. I've never seen the text, of cource, but I think I heard this story from my teacher.
    This is a story about a farmar and an earthquake which hitted Kishu (now, Wakayama Pref.), in 1854. Outline of the story is totally same as Rob Carr described above. In addition, he is not just a farmer, but a 7th meister of Yamasa soy sauce factory, a first chairman of council of Wakayama Pref., and a first minister of Post Office Dept. (It was a era of revolution...)
    For foreign countries, Lafcadio Hearn (known as Yakumo Koizumi in Japan) introduced this story first, in his book 'Gleanings in Buddha-Fields (ISBN:1596050217 or other)'. One Japanese teacher rewrited this to a simple and dense text for children, and choosed as an article of textbook by the nation. This version is re-translated to English, and taken in textbook of Colorado state elementary school, titled 'The burning of the rice fields' (the page is saying so. I don't know it's true or not).

    Actually, in Japan, everyone knows, I believe, that sea surface oftenly drawn off before a Tsunami. We live with earthquakes, typhoons, volcanos, and fires (because of densely build old wooden houses). We are so careful(even an exess sometimes) and preparing for such disasters, so we can imagine to some degree what is going on. It is terrible to have a great Tsunami without no warning and information. Systems and informations are required.