LONDON — The chain reaction that sent
enormous, deadly tidal waves crashing into the coasts of Asia and Africa on
Sunday started more than six miles beneath the ocean floor off the tip of the
Indonesian island of Sumatra.
Geologic plates pressing against each other slipped violently, creating a bulge
on the sea bottom that could be as high as 10 yards and hundreds of miles long,
one scientist said.
"It's just like moving an enormous paddle at the bottom of the sea,"
said David Booth, a seismologist at the British Geological Survey. "A big
column of water has moved, we're talking about billions of tons. This is an
enormous disturbance."
Moving at about 500 mph, the waves took more than two hours to reach Sri Lanka,
where the human toll has been horrific, and longer to spread to India and the
east coast of Africa.
And because such tidal waves rarely occur in the Indian Ocean, there is no
system in place to warn coastal communities they are about to be hit, such as
exists in the Pacific, Booth said.
"With 20-20 vision of hindsight, that'll be reconsidered," he said.
An Australian scientist had suggested in September that an Indian Ocean warning
system be set up, but it takes a year to create one. Also, those living along
the Indian Ocean's shores were less likely than Pacific coastal dwellers to know
the warning signs of an impending tidal wave _ water receding unusually fast and
far from the shore, Booth said.
Thousands were killed in countries from Indonesia to Somalia.
The underwater quake, which the U.S. Geological Survey put at magnitude 9.0, was
the biggest since 1964, when a 9.2-magnitude temblor struck Alaska, also
touching off tsunami waves. There were at least a half-dozen powerful
aftershocks, one of magnitude 7.3.
Enzo Boschi, the head of Italy's National Geophysics Institute, likened the
quake's power to detonating a million atomic bombs the size of those dropped on
Japan during World War II, and said the shaking was so powerful it even
disturbed the Earth's rotation.
"All the planet is vibrating" from the quake, he told Italian state
radio. Other scientists said it was early too say whether the rotation was
affected by the quake.
The earthquake occurred at a spot where the Indian Ocean plate is gradually
being forced underneath Sumatra, which is part of the Eurasian plate, at about
the speed at which a human fingernail grows, Booth explained.
"This slipping doesn't occur smoothly," he said. Rocks along the edge
stick against one another and pent-up energy builds over hundreds of years.
It's "almost like stretching an elastic band, and then when the strength of
the rock isn't sufficient to withstand the stress, then all along the fault line
the rocks will move," he said.
Indonesia is well-known as a major quake center, sitting along a series of fault
lines dubbed the "Ring of Fire." But scientists are unable to predict
where and when quakes will strike with any precision.
The force of Sunday's earthquake shook unusually far afield, causing buildings
to sway hundreds of miles from the epicenter, from Singapore to the city of
Chiang Mai in northern Thailand, and in Bangladesh.
The quake probably occurred about 6.2 miles beneath the ocean floor, causing the
huge, step-like protrusion on the sea bed and the resulting tidal waves.
As the waves moved across deep areas of the ocean in the early morning, they may
have been almost undetectable on the surface, with swells of about a yard or
less. But when they approached land the huge volumes of water were forced to the
surface and the waves grew higher, swamping coastal communities and causing
massive casualties.
Source: Associated Press