It’s like having some fabled subterranean monster beneath
your garden. One minute it’s all butterflies and flowers and skipping in the
sun. The next, the earth opens up to devour you.
Countries bordering the Andaman Sea and Indian Ocean have
long presented the world with a vast tropical playground of beautiful
beaches, rich forests and marine life, exotic cultures and welcoming local
people. And the Phuket area enjoys an added attraction — historically, it
has appeared all but immune to natural disaster. Even typhoons have been
rare and generally weakened by the time they hit this part of Asia.
"Disasters" tend to run to such things as a temporary drop in whale-shark
sightings among scuba divers.
For untold
years, meanwhile, a monster lurked beneath this idyllic garden. Perhaps 40
kilometres beneath the sea bottom not far west of northern Sumatra and
running north under the Andaman-Nicobar islands and beyond, colossal pieces
of the earth’s crust, subjected to unimaginable pressures countered by
friction between these blocks, were trying to slide past one another along a
1,200-kilometre fault line. Given the current state of geophysical sciences,
there was no way to anticipate when the slip would come. But come it did. In
the event, it set off an earthquake measuring 9.0 on the Richter scale, the
world’s biggest in 40 years, and violent enough, according to geologist
Kerry Sieh of the California Institute of Technology, to make the Earth
wobble on its axis.
The power of the subsequent tsunami was related to the
magnitude of the quake and to the fact that this — typically for earthquakes
occurring along subduction zones — had involved a vertical displacement of
the sea bottom. Basically, two continents are shoving up against each other,
with the India tectonic plate pushing under the Burma plate along what
scientists refer to as the Andaman Thrust. In this case, the Burma plate was
lifted by 10-30 metres, heaving up a massive column of seawater. Boats, even
vessels directly above the fault, might not have been much affected at that
point. But the upthrust water then proceeded to pour downhill in all
directions. The distance between the resulting wave crests was so great that
boat passengers probably wouldn’t even have been aware of them. But these
waves nevertheless involved enormous volumes of water moving as fast as 800
kph.
In general, with tsunamis, the drama really begins when
these behemoths encounter shallow coastal waters. Even there, few tsunamis
display the flamboyant breaks so beloved by Hollywood blockbusters. In fact,
the sea often first draws away from the shore, exposing the sea bottom for
some distance, before flooding back, sometimes repeatedly. (This effect,
where, before the first wave strikes, the sea actually recedes for several
minutes from the shoreline, may indicate that the tectonic shift that
triggered the Aceh earthquake, before the upward thrust, first caused a
radical drop in the local sea surface.) This is an especially treacherous
feature, since many people are then moved by curiosity or the promise of
abundant fish out of water to walk out on the exposed seabed. When the waves
finally arrive, there often isn’t time to run to high ground. As the waves
slow to perhaps 50-80 kph, they lose some energy due to sea-bottom drag, but
the rest is translated into increased height as, within just 10 or 15
minutes, they can soar to 30 metres or even more.
But a deceptively gentle, relatively unforbidding front
often conceals the huge volumes of water to follow as they rush toward
observers on the beach. The first waves are usually followed by a so-called
"run-up". Apparent sea level abruptly rises by several metres, with water
surging hundreds of metres in from the shoreline — in extreme cases, 1.5
kilometres or more — where floating debris, rolling vehicles and collapsing
buildings all contribute to further casualties. When the surges recede, they
can carry still more victims with them out to sea. This explains, in part,
why accurate estimates of the dead and missing may never be known.
With the recent tsunami, the scale of the disaster was exacerbated by the
very attractions that have drawn so many visitors to the region. Booming
tourism had crowded the many coastal resorts and beaches that have proven
such an economic boost to the region — among these, most prominently, Phuket
and the neighbouring provinces of Krabi and Phang Nga. Environmentally
inconsiderate tendencies, especially among smaller tourism operators, to jam
right down along the waterline frequently increased the toll. Some
environmentalists also argue that destruction of mangrove forests and coral
reefs worsened the problem in places, since these natural barriers would
otherwise have dampened the force of the waves.
Finally, casualties would have been far fewer if affected
areas had had warnings. The tsunamis first struck nearby northwestern
Sumatra with devastating force. Despite an earthquake warning issued by the
US Geological Survey by email to Bangkok’s seismological authorities, there
was no alert given to Phuket and other areas of the impended catastrophe.
With warning there would have been up to two hours to try to evacuate
coastal regions. (The waves hit India and Sri Lanka within about 4 hours of
the quake and, according to a US Geological Survey report, eventually
reached Africa, the Pacific Ocean, Hawaii and the west coast of North and
South America.) Unlike the Pacific Ocean, however, the Indian Ocean/Andaman
Sea hasn’t experienced anything remotely like this, at least since 1833, and
authorities simply weren’t prepared for what followed.
The incredible trauma inflicted on the region promises to
encourage greater preparedness in future. But we may hope that the monster
beneath the garden has itself died in this disaster, and that these seaside
resort destinations and local coastal communities, once they recover, will
be secure from future ravages of this kind. By Collin Piprell
For more information on tsunamis, consult the University
of Washington’s excellent website:
www.geophys.washing ton.edu/tsunamiintro.html.
When the tsunami struck southern Thailand on the morning
of 26 December 2004, the effect was devastating. In the first wake of the
aftermath, given all the confusion and uncertainty, and given the sometimes
overly sensationalist reporting by the international press, it might have
seemed that the whole of Phuket's west coast had been utterly destroyed. As
the dust began to settle, however, it became clear that some areas had
suffered much more than others.
In fact, effects on Phuket and neighbouring areas varied
radically from beach to beach. In many cases there was little or no damage
or loss of life.
A tsunami, while still out in the ocean, presents a train
of waves less than a metre high travelling at tremendous speeds. As it
approaches the shore and meets shallow water, the wave slows and compresses;
the energy from that wave is then directed upwards, increasing the wave
height.
The respective impact of the tsunami was very different
from beach to beach. Why was it that Patong and Kamala were hit so hard,
when Surin, for example, suffered almost not at all? The most significant
factor was the geography of the beaches. The topography of every beach in
southern Thailand differs. In any given case, when the recent tsunamis
struck, loss of human life and damage to property and the natural
environment, on each beach, was determined in part by the shape of the bay,
the local seabed, and the surrounding land area.
According to Professor Joe Cann of the University of Leeds Earth Sciences
Faculty, in the UK, "The impact of the tsunami depends primarily on the
shape of the seabed offshore in relation to the direction the wave is
travelling in. Not only on how steep the seabed is, but also