Q: hello, my name is Brendan and i
have a question related to geology in which i would like u to answer. so ya,
here it is: Why do tsunamis and volcanic eruptions often act as a result of
other catastrophic natural disasters? ya so please respond to this. Oh and btw
I am a student at endeavor charter school, just to let you know. alright well
thanks for your time and i hope to get a response. – Brendan J
A: Hi, Brendan - I can provide some
brief answers.
Tsunamis are caused by SOME volcanic
eruptions and by SOME earthquakes:
1. Thera volcano in the eastern
Mediterranean erupted catastrophically around 1,500 BC. It triggered a tsunami that destroyed
the Minoan civilization based on Crete. The 1883 eruption of Krakatau volcano
in Indonesia sent a tsunami into the island of Java that scoured everything within 10
kilometers of the coastline and swept it all back to the sea. Contemporary descriptions said that you could walk
across the Sunda Strait because of all the bodies (people, livestock) and logs
floating there. MOST volcanic eruptions, however, do NOT cause tsunamis. For
one thing, the volcano must be adjacent to an ocean for this to be possible.
2. The tsunami that
destroyed the
Fukushima Di-Ichi nuclear powerplant, and destroyed much of the Sendai,
Japan,
coast, was caused by the Great Tohoku earthquake of 2011. The tsunami
happened
because a 200 km by 600 km slab of ocean floor was suddenly uplifted
several
meters by a sudden slip on a subduction fault offshore. The displaced
seawater slopped onto the nearby coast, and a security camera showed a
15-meter (nearly 50 foot) wave crashing into the facility, wreaking
nearly incomprehensible damage - that is still evolving as I write this.
MOST earthquakes,
however, do NOT cause tsunamis. There must be an uplift or down-drop of a
large
piece of ocean floor for this to happen.
Volcanoes are connected indirectly
to subduction earthquakes - the Pacific Ring of Fire is an example of how they
are related. A down-going section of oceanic crust, being over-ridden by a
lighter-density continental crust (Sendai, Japan, and the coast of Washington
State in the US, for instance), gives rise to volcanoes. The oceanic crust is heated up
as it works its way deeper and deeper into the hot Mantle, and fluids in that
down-going slab of oceanic crust contribute to partial melting. This is where
lighter component elements of the oceanic floor float up until they burst through the
overlying continental crust. Think of a lava lamp: it's the same general principle. Just
offshore of North America, Kamchatka, Japan, the Philippines, and Indonesia
(and many other places) there is a subduction fault where a continental section
is riding over an oceanic crust. Just INLAND from these subduction faults you will
find chains of volcanoes paralleling the same coastal margin - the Cascades
Range extending from California to British Columbia is an example. One may not
directly cause the other, but they are certainly related nevertheless.
An earthquake was closely associated
with to the 1980 eruption of Mount St Helens, but to this day geologists still argue
about it. Did the earthquake trigger the eruption of the highly-unstable volcano? Or did the eruption cause
the largest earthquake in recorded human history?
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