Is the word Tsunami a Japanese word? I understand they have had many Tsunami's. I saw this drawing and thought it looked like some of the pictures we have seen.


Seems to me that the word "Tsunami" is ingrained in all of us since 2004, regardless of our language.Ugly Dougly wrote:It means "harbor wave".
[youtube][/youtube]MyDearFriend wrote:They have a volcano erupting now, too.
1755 Lisbon earthquake -- estimated ~9 magnitude, generated large seismic sea waves on the shores of Portugal, Ireland, Cornwall, North Africa and some Caribbean islands.wedeliver wrote:
Although the devastation is awful, I'm sure it doesn't cover the whole country. And besides, even if we could evacuate in any sort of expeditious manner, where would we put them? It's not like there's much free real estate in the world. Beyond that there is the truth that there are dangers everywhere. And the truth is that volcanic soils are rich in nutrients. Let's get the population down everywhere in the world (and, no, I'm not suggesting that letting everyone in the quake zone die is a way to do that) and do our best to site residential areas and to build infrastructure in appropriate ways.Boijoy wrote:Im not trying to be a smartass, But can we just send a bunch of boats & start moving people out of there?? I mean, dang,, seems like the island is going to implode or something.
That is an amazing focusing of energy!Ugly Dougly wrote:. The top of the Tokyo Tower is bent.
That sounds significant as hell. Perhaps they'll start ordaining women or something in response.AntiM wrote:He's pointing in a new direction now.
Me too, but the elevator didn't bother me. A least not that I remember.AntiM wrote:
I've been up Tokyo Tower. The high speed elevator made me sick as hell.
We helped them write their new constitution, and in many cases, we were helping them rebuild almost immediately after the war. Admiral Decker had the silver which was hidden underwater in Yokosuka Bay, he returned it all so the city could be rebuilt, rather than keep it as spoils of war for the US.TomServo wrote:The Japanese are our friends now! Keep that in mind, when we killed tens of thousands of them with just two bombs. Im not supporting or arguing that, but they were able to rebuild, better than before! My hopes and prayers go out to the nation of Japan, but I have confidence they will be back.
As often as this story has played out, and been told, it still brings a small tear, for the thought of humanity, and, how, with just a small spark, we can be enemies, or friends. And the wonder, why so often the enemy part wins.AntiM wrote:We helped them write their new constitution, and in many cases, we were helping them rebuild almost immediately after the war. Admiral Decker had the silver which was hidden underwater in Yokosuka Bay, he returned it all so the city could be rebuilt, rather than keep it as spoils of war for the US.TomServo wrote:The Japanese are our friends now! Keep that in mind, when we killed tens of thousands of them with just two bombs. Im not supporting or arguing that, but they were able to rebuild, better than before! My hopes and prayers go out to the nation of Japan, but I have confidence they will be back.
Weird moment: my parents were visiting me, and my house owner had a family dinner for us. My father and her father sat and talked about the war, how they'd both been into photography, and the places they had been at the same time. The Same Time. As enemies, but they were now sitting together over beer.
I have no doubt Japan will bounce back. But I still ache for the families who have been destroyed.
Monkeypoo wrote:
Well, I was gonna say.... At least the Japanese Whalers who were out in the
oceans illegally hunting and killing whales were spared from the earthquake
and tsunami...