Science
Related: About this forumThird in series: Tsunami warnings improved since Great Alaska Earthquake
but unlikely to help those closest.
http://www.adn.com/2014/03/24/3391997/terror-of-tsunamis-warning-systems.html?sp=/99/100/&ihp=1
NOAA's National Geophysical Data Center puts the total number of deaths resulting from the Great Alaska Earthquake of 1964 at 139. Fifteen of those deaths are attributed to falling buildings or crumbling ground during the quake itself.
The rest were killed by water.
Thirty-two people died when a wave 30 feet high boiled up in Port Valdez. Similar sized waves took 12 lives in Seward and 15 in Kodiak and its surrounding villages. Another dozen perished when a wall of water 40 feet high smashed into Whittier. In the Prince William Sound village of Chenega, a third of the population -- 23 people -- was swept away by a 90-foot wave.
Smaller numbers of casualties were reported in scattered settlements across the region, from Cape St. Elias to Port Nellie Juan. One death took place at Shoup Bay on Valdez Arm, where the wave may have splashed 220 feet up the Chugach mountains.
In many places, the ground was still shaking as the water hit.
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Read more here: http://www.adn.com/2014/03/24/3391997/terror-of-tsunamis-warning-systems.html?sp=/99/100/&ihp=1#storylink=cpy
uppityperson
(115,678 posts)Blue_In_AK
(46,436 posts)It's people's personal accounts of their experiences that day.
My sister-in-law was in the Fourth Avenue Theater with her little sister watching a movie when the quake hit.
uppityperson
(115,678 posts)chasm, drop something into it so it will close. This probably came from hearing my mom talk about those kids who were disappeared chamged by my childhood mind. I remember her saying if there was a quake, do not go down into the chasms.
That must've been terribly frightening to live through, the quake. Down here in WA I am very aware we are due.
These articles are very good, thanks Blue.
Blue_In_AK
(46,436 posts)still tear up when they talk about it. 50 years of PTSD.