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Arthur C. Clarke Reports From Sri Lanka

Jeff Patterson writes "Sir Arthur C. Clarke has filed a damage report from his home in Sri Lanka on the Clarke Foundation page. He is fine, however 'among those affected are my staff based at our diving station in Hikkaduwa and holiday bungalow in Kahawa -- both beachfront properties located in areas worst hit. We still don't know the full extent of damage as both roads and phones have been damaged. Early reports indicate that we have lost most of our diving equipment and boats. Not all our staff members are accounted for -- yet.'"

20 of 704 comments (clear)

  1. Very sad, .. still going on by Gopal.V · · Score: 4, Informative

    Diving stuff and boats were the major disaster area.. I think Sri Lanka is a bit more exposed than Kerala was.

    The wave in kerala went nearly 4 kms inland (though it's through the backwaters) and I'm still having painful memories of seeing a white mercedes floating around in the basement of a building ...

    The Marine Drive is around 6-7 feet above sea level and is the major business/market area in Cochin - thankfully we're on the right side of India to be compared to the earthquake.

    Thanks to a timely news on radio and TV , only a few hundreds were caught unawares ... East coast was not so lucky.

  2. wikipedia as a news source by pamri · · Score: 5, Informative

    Wikipedia has two articles churning out information about things as they happen besides info about the disaster that have already happened and they contain plenty of links to other news sources. See, 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake in India

  3. Re:You won't read anything about it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    DG is fine, asshole.

  4. Re:Day after Tomorrow by ovatto · · Score: 3, Informative

    Just heard on the radio: at least some of the finnish tourists who are not injured (and thus are not among the first to leave) are helping out the locals in Thailand.

    Wouldn't be surprised if others did too.

  5. South Asian Bloggers unite for Tsunami Help Blog by sanspeak · · Score: 5, Informative

    Some south asian bloggers have created a blog tsunamihelp.blogspot.com blogging about the latest news and information about the tsunami, agencies suppoting the victims and involved in relief, places where donations can be made, volunteering information and much more.

  6. Re:Earth's Rotation by Flaming+Foobar · · Score: 4, Informative
    I have seen on the AP wire that this quake was large enough to affect the earth's rotation. Could that possibly in turn affect the earth's magnetic field.

    No, the disruption isn't big enough. The rotation sped up by a 10,000th of a second. It's hardly worth mentioning in the news. Earth's orbit changed, too, according to this article.

    --
    while true;do echo -e -n "\033[s\n\033[u\134_\033[B";done
  7. Re:Here's your foreign 9/11 by el-spectre · · Score: 3, Informative

    I haven't seen anything else on CNN in 2 days...

    --
    "Faith: Belief without evidence in what is told by one who speaks without knowledge, of things without parallel." - A.B.
  8. tsunami Video by nodnarb1978 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Video here high bandwidth server, no worries. 4 different videos. Amazing footage.

    1. Re:tsunami Video by AnuradhaRatnaweera · · Score: 4, Informative

      More videos are here. One is 9 MB and the other is 105 MB!.

  9. According to Various Agenceies by OverlordQ · · Score: 5, Informative
    The countries that bore the brunt of the tsunami had no notice of what was coming but the earthquake, the largest for 40 years, had been monitored by the Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre in Honolulu.

    "We don't have contacts in our address book for anybody in that part of the world," National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration director Charles McCreery said.

    Story here. Since that didn't work, they called the State Department, who ALSO tried to find out who to contact, but again, due to lack of adequate warning systems/organizations, they failed as well.
    --
    Your hair look like poop, Bob! - Wanker.
  10. Donations by riteshm · · Score: 5, Informative
    I am from India so I can talk about my country.

    Any of you planning to donate some money? Dollar may be losing ground but it still has 44 times more value than Indian Rupees. So if you donate 100 dollars that means 4400 Indian Rupees (INR). And to give you an idea what this could mean.. a normal meal in India is around 40 INR while cheap clothing is around 100-200 INR. And medicines per day per person won't be more than 100-200 INR. Taking some conservative estimates, your 100 dollars can save an Indian for 10 days till things get under control and one can start living on one's own. Kindly consider donating... Visit my blog http://ritesh.blogspot.com/ and this blog http://tsunamihelp.blogspot.com/ for some info on how/where to donate. Redcross and UNICEF are also accepting donations now.

    Regards, Ritesh

  11. Wobble != Orbit by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 5, Informative
    The Earth's orbit DID NOT change. What may have changed (slightly) is the angle at which the Earth sits in relation to the plane of the ecliptic.

    Short of a major loss or gain of mass, or impulse from a massive impact, the Earth just keeps trucking along in it's rut. While the energy is tremendous in an Earthquake, the energy just moves mass around within the same system.

    --
    "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
    --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
  12. Re:Here's your foreign 9/11 by pedestrian+crossing · · Score: 4, Informative

    The sea retreats just before the tsunami hits because the wave is symmetrical. When the wave is out at sea, it is very deep. When the bottom of the wave hits the shallows, there is nowhere for the water to go but up. This pulls the water away from the shore as the wave builds up.

    A lot of people got swept away (or dragged over the coral) because they were naturally curious when they saw the sea suddenly retreat and walked out to see what was going on, only to get hammered when the wave arrived.

    --
    A house divided against itself cannot stand.
  13. Who are you gonna call by TheAcousticMotrbiker · · Score: 5, Informative

    Oddly enough, the Arthur C Clarke Foundation is actually working on just that. Setting up an alert system for Tsunamis:

    http://www.clarkefoundation.org/projects

    PROJECT WARN in Partnership with the Japan US Science Technology and Space Applications Program (JUSTSAP)

    The purpose of Project Warn is combine enhanced communications and IT systems to provide warning of impending natural or man-made disasters and to provide on-going communications and remote sensing and GIS support during disaster relief operations. The Clarke Foundation is working with the Pacific Disaster Center, the Asian Disaster Mitigation Organization, the United Nations, and the US and Japanese Governments as coordinated through the JUSTSAP organization to carry out a suitable test and demonstration in this area. In particular a simulation and test is being planned in the Pacific Region in 2005 to determine to how to use the latest information and sensing technology more effectively in the advent of that a major Tsunami might impact an Asian country or island. Clarke Foundation personnel are providing technical advice and support on a volunteer basis to this project.

  14. Found the reference by GuyFawkes · · Score: 3, Informative

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/ne ws/2001/08/29/nwave29.xml

    BRITAIN faces a natural disaster that will flatten the Atlantic coastline for several miles inland, a scientist predicted yesterday.

    A massive landslide caused by a volcanic eruption in the Canary Islands would create a giant wave that would hit the coast at up to 500mph.

    The largest mega-tsunami ever seen would be generated when an eruption of Cumbre Vieja on the island of La Palma caused a part of a mountain twice the size of the Isle of Man to plunge into the Atlantic.

    "The first impact will be when 330ft waves crash into the west Saharan coast of Morocco," said Simon Day, of the Benfield Greig hazard research centre at University College London.

    "It is not a question of if it will happen, only when it will happen. It could be in the next few decades; it could be hundreds of years hence."

    Devastation from the tsunami was also highly likely in Florida, Brazil and the Caribbean. There the wave would reach heights of 130ft to 164ft - higher than Nelson's column - and could sweep four and a half miles inland.

    Dr Day said: "It is a geologically definite process, a bit like a pressure cooker, with the volcano heating up the ground water and pressure building up inside the mountain."

    In 1949 the mountain moved 12ft in two days, but the disaster waiting to happen would be much greater, according to Dr Day's report, published in Geophysical Research Letters.

    The collapse of the mountain on the west of Cumbre Vieja would release enough energy, equivalent to the electricity consumption of America in six months, to generate a wave more than half a mile high and tens of miles long.

    This would collapse and rebound on the Canaries. As the landslide continued to move underwater, a series of waves would develop, creating enormous surges all over the Atlantic.

    "After only 10 minutes, the tsunami will have moved more than 150 miles," Dr Day said. It would reach America in little more than six hours.

    There have been at least 11 tsunamis in the past 200,000 years, one of which wiped out Minoan civilisation on Crete.

    The largest recorded wave to hit Britain was the Lisbo tsunami of 1755, when 12ft seas pounded Cornwall.

    About 7,000 years ago, the Storegga tsunami, caused by a landslide off Norway, deposited silt several miles inland in northern Scotland.

    "When the wave from the Canaries reaches Britain, it could be as high as the Storegga, which may have been up to 60ft," Dr Day said.

    "It is difficult to know how far the ramifications will go. We should be looking at the doomed civilisation of Crete when assessing the effects."

    http://www.google.co.uk/search?hl=en&q=canary+is la nds+mountain+landslide+tsunami&spell=1

    --
    http://slashdot.org/~GuyFawkes/journal
  15. Re:There is a much worse Tsunami impending for USA by jergh · · Score: 3, Informative

    There is a reference to this theory in a CNN article, talking about "a wall of water more than 164 feet high" hitting the U.S. east coast.

    Don't panic.

    But other researchers in Britain discounted the prediction as the product of a speculative computer model. They said that over the last 200,000 years there had been only two huge landslides on the flanks of the Canary Islands and that there was geologic evidence indicating the slides broke up and fell into the sea in bits instead of one big whoosh.

  16. and now land mines too by phr1 · · Score: 4, Informative

    From http://news.scotsman.com/latest.cfm?id=3934945

    Land Mines Add to Sri Lanka's Misery

    Tidal waves that hammered Sri Lanka have uprooted land mines that threaten to kill or maim survivors trying to return home while endangering relief workers, a Unicef official said today.

    The tsunami have scattered mines and destroyed warning signs, said Ted Chaiban, the aid agency's Sri Lanka chief.

    "Land mines are posing a new risk to Sri Lankans, and to relief efforts," he said. "Mines were floated by the floods and washed out of known mine fields, so now we don't know where they are and the warning signs ... have been swept away or destroyed."

    The greatest danger will come when survivors begin to return to their homes, not knowing where the mines are, Chaiban said.

    More than 1.5 million mines have been planted across Sri Lanka by the army and Tamil Tiger rebels have been fighting for a separate homeland since 1983.

  17. Re:Good Grief by Martin+Blank · · Score: 3, Informative

    The US is also moving naval assets in the region -- which often have helicopters -- into place to assist with operations, and is deploying P-3 Orion reconnaissance aircraft to take pictures of the coastlines to assist in planning recovery operations.

    I expect US donations from private citizens and aid groups are ramping up fairly quickly.

    --
    You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
  18. Check USGS website.... by Chanc_Gorkon · · Score: 3, Informative

    Everyone should check out http://www.usgs.gov and see alot of the data collected on this. I know this seems kind of cold to look at the data, but the thing that impressed me the most was the animation they have that shows just how large of an area that this has affected. It's staggering. BILLIONS of dollars will have to be spent over many years to get things back to the way they were on Christmas day. Lives of MILLIONS will be affected in one way or another. The most disturbing thing that I have heard has been the greens blaming this on global warming....um..ok....whatever dudes.

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    Gorkman

  19. Tsunami speed explained in bad english. by Ch_Omega · · Score: 3, Informative

    It is true that tsunamis travel really fast, but only when in deep water. When the tsunami enters more shallow water, the speed goes down to about 40-50mph, while the wave itself starts to grow in height because of the higher-speed water pushing from behind. This is also the reason that the tsunami is more or less invisible when traveling across deep water.